Mineral water from several European nations has been found for the first time to be contaminated with TFA, a type of PFAS “forever chemical” that is a reproductive toxicant accumulating at alarming levels across the globe.
The finding is startling because mineral water should be pristine and insulated from manmade chemicals. The contamination is thought to stem from the heavy application of pesticides containing TFA, or compounds that turn into it in the environment, which are used throughout the world.
Pesticide Action Network Europe detected TFA in 10 out of 19 mineral waters, and at levels as much as 32 times above the threshold that should trigger regulatory action in the European Union. The findings underscore the need for “urgent action”, the paper’s authors wrote, and come as authorities there propose new limits for some TFA pesticide products.
Related
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/aug/16/detroit-tfa-forever-chemical
Sounds like pesticides heavily use it, heavy industry as well as certain clean energy applications. This goes on my list of items containing PFAS, including rain gear, most non-stick cooking equipment, umbrellas, shoes, (gliding) dental floss, cosmetics, all toilet paper, reusable (glass, bamboo) and paper straws, takeaway food packaging, and anything “-resistant” such as grease, water, fire, or heat resistant.
Also, basically most fertilizer or soils that have had any sewage sludge fertilizers in the past 40 years. Which is most of our foods.
At this point, I think it’s just easier to list stuff that isn’t heavily contaminated with industrial runoff or horrible chemicals that bioaccumlate in your body.
I’m starting to doubt my reading capabilities. I went through the source and what I read was « Nevertheless, each of the mineral waters tested - even the one with the highest measured contamination of 3,200 ng/l - complies with most of the current human health guideline values set by various authorities in the EU ».
So it is contaminated but within acceptable limits. Traces beside a few brands that have larger traces still within those limits.
That on top with the fact that it seems to only be about bottled water which, at least in Belgium, is neither necessary nor that popular around me, makes me wonder what’s the call to action here.
Nevertheless, each of the mineral waters tested- even the one with the highest measured contamination of 3,200 ng/l - complies with most of the current human health guideline values set by various authorities in the EU ».
So it is contaminated but within acceptable limits. Traces beside a few brands that have larger traces still within those limits.
I looked through many of the links in the article but can’t find this info you quoted. Please verify your source.