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Earth Science

US Landfills Are Major Source of Toxic PFAS Pollution, Study Finds (theguardian.com) 47

Toxic PFAS "forever chemicals" that leach from landfills into groundwater are among the major pollution sources in the US, and remain a problem for which officials have yet to find an effective solution. Now new research has identified another route in which PFAS may escape landfills and threaten the environment at even higher levels: the air. From a report: PFAS gas that emits from landfill waste ends up highly concentrated in the facilities' gas treatment systems, but the systems are not designed to manage or destroy the chemicals, and much of them probably end up in the environment.

The findings, which showed up to three times as much PFAS in landfill gas as in leachate, are "definitely an alarming thing for us to see," said Ashley Lin, a University of Florida researcher and the lead author of the study. "These findings suggest that landfill gas, a less scrutinized byproduct, serves as a major pathway for the mobility of PFAS from landfills," the paper's authors wrote.

PFAS are a class of about 16,000 compounds used to make products resistant to water, stains and heat. They are called "forever chemicals" because they do not naturally break down and have been found to accumulate in humans. The chemicals are linked to cancer, birth defects, liver disease, thyroid disease, plummeting sperm counts and a range of other serious health problems. As researchers have begun to understand the chemicals' dangers in recent years, the focus has largely been on water pollution, and regulators have said virtually all leachate from the nation's 200 landfills contain PFAS. But scientists are beginning to understand that PFAS air pollution is also a significant threat.

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US Landfills Are Major Source of Toxic PFAS Pollution, Study Finds

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  • at least in sweden. they stink of a strange sort of mold. and wouldnt you know, after a few years, the ink on the receipts fade.
    • Are you talking about thermal paper? I couldn't find any info on this. Do you have a link? Jeg snakker n0rsk og jeg forsta litt svensk.
    • I already added what I could below, but I want to comment on how I went to my files a while back, way back, and found a number of important receipts were nearly blank. They were in a folder in a drawer. Since then, I scan very important receipts and keep with my backed up data. I rarely have to and it's not a bother when it's something like warranty, takes 10 minutes or less to scan and throw in the dox bin.

  • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This (Score:5, Informative)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Friday August 09, 2024 @10:30AM (#64692648)

      New landfills are built with barriers so crap doesn't leech out. Old landfills weren't. Digging out an old landfill to fix it will probably do more environmental damage than leaving it alone.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Lehk228 ( 705449 )
        it's probably not a one size fits all thing, each landfill should be evaluated to determine the risks, depending on local geology there may be no point in doing anything or it might be a disaster in slow motion that we can stop.
    • Yeah, this actually seems a lot better than if the sources were more diffuse. Particularly the waste gasses are are increasingly being collected, but not yet treated for PFAS. The groundwater issue is tough though.
    • "regulators have said virtually all leachate from the nation's 200 landfills contain PFAS."

      The number of landfills in the U.S. is in the thousands--not a couple hundred.

    • Recycling plastics works fine if you use fluid bed pyrolysis. It's not profitable so they don't do it. Stop repeating the lie that it cannot be done.

    • They are actually working on making plastic burgers [mtu.edu]:

      Bites depolymerizes plastics without creating toxic chemicals or carbon streams, using biological processes to transform it into a protein source with very low or zero greenhouse gas emissions. It does this by feeding the waste to hungry yeast strains and then further processing the product.15 maj 2024.

      2 [climatesort.com]:

      Students from Yale University discovered a mushroom species that can eat plastic. The mushroom, called Pestalotiopsis microspore, comes from the Amazon rainforest. Astoundingly, these mushrooms can survive on plastic alone. The fungi consume polyurethane and convert it into organic matter.

  • Toxic PFAS "forever chemicals" that leach from landfills into groundwater are among the major pollution sources in the US

    Sounds like this should be a problem everywhere — or is there something unique about American landfills in particular?

    • It probably is a problem everywhere.

    • Toxic PFAS "forever chemicals" that leach from landfills into groundwater are among the major pollution sources in the US

      Sounds like this should be a problem everywhere — or is there something unique about American landfills in particular?

      It's a problem everywhere. That said, and this is important, only in America will we find a way to build an entire industry around the problem that makes lots and LOTS of money for somebody, probably while making the taxpayers cover the cost.

  • to pay for the clearup (when someone figures out how) as they obviously didn't bother to do proper enviromental and biological tests to discover the full impact.

    • you can pawn most plastic / aluminium bottles / cans in sweden at least, a lot of homeless people and junkies live on collecting them. when the plastic ones are recycled they make fabrics out of them. they used to be real stale and itchy back in the mid 1900s, but todays versions are more like silk. soft and doesnt irritate the skin. the consumers have to pay for the pawn cost though (and they dont have to specify them in the cost labels), 2 litres coke can cost 4kr at discounts and the pawn increase is 2kr
    • by sad_ ( 7868 )

      I just watched Dark Waters this week, that tells a different story, of dupont (and 3M) knowing well what the damage was that PFAS could do, to humans and environment. They just decided to ignore it.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by ravenshrike ( 808508 ) on Friday August 09, 2024 @10:53AM (#64692702)

    It's not one the /. crowd will like because it produces CO2, but thermal decomposition would work perfectly well to get rid of it all and then compress the remaining material into blocks and toss into the now empty landfills.

    • I personally feel that burning waste is a perfectly acceptable tradeoff to the co2 it produces since there are additional benefits besides the extra energy but as you mentioned you can condense waste and sequester contaminates at the same time. There are many, many easier targets for co2 reductons before we get to this one.

    • Plenty of biohazard waste is incinerated as a matter of course for that reason. The problem might be more in sorting PFAS materials from stuff that is better off landfilled than burned. A lot of 'recycle bin plastic' is sorted by type and then burned at the ideal temperature to minimize pollution already, but not sure if the variety of things containing PFAS allows for this.
    • they actually make synthetic logs out of woodchips, by compressing them. they are much more energy efficient and doesnt produce a lot of contaminants when burnt.
  • When most of our modern world is made of shitty plastics and has all these PFAS contaminating them, along with all the planned obsolescence and cheap materials promoting over-consumption and disposible products, how could anyone be surprised our landfills are also filled with all this crap? If it's produced it's gotta go somewhere.
  • Remove some of your PFAS, give your blood. PFAS are also bad for the receiver, but that person has more serious problems at receiving time.

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