The Biden administration on Wednesday finalized strict limits on certain so-called"forever chemicals" in drinking water that will require utilities to reduce them to the lowest level they can be reliably measured. Officials say this will reduce exposure for 100 million people and help prevent thousands of illnesses, including cancers.
Utility groups warn the rules will cost tens of billions of dollars each and fall hardest on small communities with fewer resources. Legal challenges are sure to follow. "It's that accumulation that's the problem," said Scott Belcher, a North Carolina State University professor who researches PFAS toxicity."Even tiny, tiny, tiny amounts each time you take a drink of water over your lifetime is going to keep adding up, leading to the health effects."
Water providers will generally have three years to do testing. If those test exceed the limits, they'll have two more years to install treatment systems, according to EPA officials. The new regulation is"going to throw public confidence in drinking water into chaos," said Mike McGill, president of WaterPIO, a water industry communications firm.
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