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Report: PFAS pollution from military bases threatens Chesapeake Bay by Jake Thomas Washington DC (UPI) Aug 11, 2021 Toxic chemicals from military installations have seeped into the Chesapeake Bay, harming wildlife and threatening food supplies and livelihoods, according to an analysis of U.S. Department of Defense records by an environmental watchdog group. The Environmental Working Group revealed its finding on Wednesday that it had found perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl, chemicals known as "PFAS," at nine military installations near the bay. The chemicals have been used by the department in firefighting foams for decades. Called "forever chemicals" because they don't break down in the environment, PFAS elevate the risk of cancer, harm fetal development and reduce vaccine effectiveness. They can also harm crabs, oysters, rockfish and other wildlife, as well as those that consume them, according to the Environmental Working Group. The Langley Air Force Base, in Hampton, Va., had the highest levels of chemicals, the group found. However, its analysis of records did not show the presence of the chemicals at several other bases. Scott Faber, the group's senior vice president for government affairs, described the contamination to The Guardian as an "extremely troubling" health threat to the nation's largest estuary. "We've seen higher levels in water, but not many ... and it strikes at the heart and, perhaps more importantly, the stomach of everyone who comes from this part of the world," Faber said. The findings follow a similar study released last year by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility that found elevated PFAS levels in fish, crabs and oysters. The Environmental Working Group has called on the department to hasten its planned cleanup. The U.S. The Department of Defense has identified 698 military installations where the chemicals were used, a top department official told a congressional subcommittee in May. Richard Kidd, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for environment and energy resilience, told lawmakers that it had assessed 129 installations. Of those, 63 required no further action while the department was proceeding with a remedial investigation and feasibility study for 66. He said preliminary work on the sites will be completed by 2024 and cleanup will likely take decades. Kidd estimated the cleanup cost will be over $29 billion. A Government Accountability Office report released in June found the cost will "likely increase significantly" beyond earlier estimates.
Contested Chilean mining project given crucial boost Santiago (AFP) Aug 11, 2021 A regional environmental evaluation commission in Chile on Wednesday approved a controversial mining project close to a national reserve that is home to a vulnerable species of penguin, despite protests from activists. The project was previously rejected in 2017 under the government of socialist ex-president Michelle Bachelet for environmental reasons. But a year later, under the new government of right-wing billionaire President Sebastian Pinera, a court ordered a new environmental impact study ... read more
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