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Do you need to worry about “forever chemicals”?

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Monday, April 22, 2024

Water being sampled for PFAS testing in Salindres, France, in April 2024. | Pascal Guyot/AFP via Getty Images A roadmap for PFAS risk, testing, and more. In 1992, Sandy Wynn-Stelt and her husband Joel bought a house they loved in a wooded area near Grand Rapids, Michigan. Twenty-four years later, Joel abruptly died of liver cancer; the year after that, state authorities knocked on Sandy’s door to ask if they could test the private well that supplied her home’s drinking water. That water, it turned out, had 38,000 parts per trillion of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, otherwise known as PFAS. And the results were even higher on repeat testing. The chemicals had leached into her and her neighbors’ wells from the surrounding aquifer, into which the Wolverine Worldwide shoe company had been dumping its tannery waste for years. The attorney Wynn-Stelt hired suggested she get her blood checked for PFAS, and when her stratospherically high levels came back, “everybody’s jaw hit the floor,” she says. Her doctor, initially flummoxed, knew of a study that had found high cancer and disease risks in thousands exposed to PFAS over the course of a half-century near a West Virginia DuPont plant (an event that received renewed attention after the 2019 release of the film Dark Waters). Soon after, Wynn-Stelt was diagnosed with thyroid cancer — a very treatable condition with an excellent prognosis, but still a shock. Wynn-Stelt feels lucky her doctor took her seriously and responded proactively. She’s since helped create a medical education video aimed at clinicians, but realizes many patients and providers still struggle to find a way forward when PFAS exposure is on the list of health concerns. “How do we get doctors to pay attention to that along with the 3,000 other things?” she says. PFAS isn’t just one chemical, but thousands of different chemicals used in a range of industrial processes, many of which involve making products slick, nonstick, or waterproof. Unlike some other synthetic chemicals, they’re extraordinarily hard to break apart: They degrade especially slowly in the environment and in human bodies, leading to the moniker “forever chemicals.” For decades, companies dumped PFAS directly into the natural environment, including rivers and aquifers, contaminating drinking water in many parts of the US. Additionally, consumer products shed the chemicals onto surfaces in our homes and into the food we eat. As a consequence, experts believe most people have some quantity of PFAS in their bodies. In early April, the Environmental Protection Agency set the first national limits for six PFAS chemicals in drinking water; water purveyors will have five years to comply. While that’s an important step, it doesn’t address the broader problem of the US’s broken policy regulating the chemical industry’s safety practices — policies made even more favorable to industry under the Trump administration. “The number of PFAS that are going out into our environment under the aegis of trade secrecy is very substantial,” says Alan Ducatman, a retired physician who led several PFAS research projects at West Virginia University and now consults for consumer health advocacy groups. In a world where our environment’s safety is so closely tethered to capitalist interests, understanding how to manage and make decisions about environmental risks rests on patients and providers — even though it shouldn’t. Here’s what you need to know about assessing your PFAS exposure risk, getting tested, and working with a health care provider to find a way forward. Do I need to worry about PFAS? High PFAS levels are associated with a range of health problems, including high cholesterol, some cancers, and immune system disorders; some health consequences linked with the chemicals also appear to be present with low blood PFAS levels. While their health risks are concerning — and scientists still have a lot to learn about them — it can be helpful to think of PFAS in the context of some other common toxins, says Ducatman. If you had “the choice between smoking a pack [of cigarettes] a day or being in one of those high-PFAS populations,” he says, “high-PFAS population is way safer.” However, health-minded people can avoid cigarettes, while they don’t have the option of not drinking water — and the more experts understand about PFAS’s links to human disease, the more concerned they get. A reasonable first step toward understanding your own PFAS risk is looking into the safety of your drinking water over the years and reviewing your employment history. That’s because people with high PFAS levels typically get them either by drinking contaminated water on a frequent basis or through extended on-the-job exposure, said Jamie DeWitt, a PFAS researcher who directs Oregon State University’s Environmental Health Sciences Center. It’s not as straightforward as it should be to get information about the PFAS levels in your drinking water. The Environmental Working Group maintains a map of tap water levels from all over the US, but its data is far from complete — for example, no data from New York City is included. Several experts told me that for people in metropolitan areas, the best way to get information about your local water source is by contacting your water purveyor directly. Your mileage may vary: Although my local paper reported recent monitoring (mandated by the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule of the Safe Drinking Water Act) showed PFAS in Atlanta drinking water, details were not readily available from the Atlanta Department of Watershed Management on the website or over the phone. Smaller water utilities not covered by that rule might not gather this data, and if you get your water from a private well, you’d need to get it tested to know if its water contains PFAS, says DeWitt. “If you’re exposed to less than four parts per trillion” — the level set by the EPA in the latest regulations — “you can generally anticipate that your health risks are relatively low. Not nonexistent, but relatively low,” DeWitt says. People whose drinking water has higher levels and hasn’t been filtered (more on that later) may be at increased risk. When it comes to assessing your occupational risk, you can start with the PFAS exposure history on the US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry website. At highest risk are people who work in facilities that produce PFAS chemicals, and people whose jobs use products that contain lots of PFAS, including firefighters, carpet installers, ski waxers, and people in hospitality who handle a lot of food packaging. You can also ask your doctor to help you assess your risk. Even if they don’t have expertise in environmental health, lots of information and training is available to get them up to speed: Several experts recommended the resources on the clinician section of the PFAS REACH (Research, Education, and Action for Community Health) website, and the lengthy but well-organized document published by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM). What does PFAS testing look like? If you or your provider determines you’re likely to have been exposed to a relatively high amount of PFAS, the next step is getting your levels tested. Insurance companies don’t typically cover these tests, and it costs between $300 and $500 out of pocket. Although tests aren’t done by most hospital labs, Quest Diagnostics recently began offering a PFAS test. Usually, the test is done on blood obtained through a routine blood draw, although some tests can also be conducted on urine. Ducatman cautions that testing is somewhat limited in what it can tell you. “What people want to know is two things: ‘What’s my PFAS levels,’” he says, “and ‘What are my risks from that,’ which the test doesn’t interpret for you.” That’s partly because the levels testing labs define as normal are sometimes based on old data — and partly because the industries that produce PFAS are constantly creating chemicals to replace the ones restricted by regulation, he said. To explain what makes PFAS testing so complicated, says Courtney Carignan, an environmental exposure scientist at Michigan State University, it’s worth comparing the chemicals to another well-described environmental toxin: lead. It’s much simpler to identify in the environment and in people, partly because it’s just one substance. “The thing that makes PFAS more difficult is that there’s so many of them,” she says, “so we are playing this whack-a-mole game.” While commercially available PFAS tests might not yield data on all of the thousands of PFAS chemicals that could be in a person’s body, it’s still a reasonable place to start when it comes to understanding the individual risk of health outcomes related to these chemicals. How can I minimize the negative consequences of high PFAS levels? When a patient comes to a health care provider with abnormal results from a PFAS test, there’s a non-zero chance they’ll get a blank stare. “That’s the way health care practitioners are educated — toxicology is just a really small piece of their education,” says DeWitt. Again, patients can point their providers to resources published by PFAS REACH and NASEM to help guide the way forward. These organizations differ slightly in their approaches to medical monitoring for PFAS effects, but both recommend that people with high blood levels of the chemicals get blood and urine tests on a regular basis to check for high cholesterol and abnormal liver, kidney, and thyroid function. They also recommend regular urine tests to check for certain kidney conditions, regular screening for testicular cancer and ulcerative colitis (which usually starts with a physical exam and may involve some testing), and screening for breast cancer (which may mean getting more mammograms than otherwise recommended). Experts also recommend providers speak with patients about the likelihood of PFAS transmission to newborns through pregnancy and breastfeeding, and inform them that high levels of the chemicals may inhibit responses to vaccines. There’s no Food and Drug Administration-approved treatment to lower PFAS levels. What everyone can do to prevent PFAS exposure to begin with Although it’s almost impossible to completely avoid contact with PFAS, you can take some steps to reduce your exposure. Filtering your drinking water can help lower its PFAS levels, whether you do it with the first-line (but pricey) reverse osmosis under-sink filters or the cheaper (but still pretty good) carbon filters in pitchers, sinks, and refrigerators. It can also help to avoid waterproofing and stain-resistance treatments for carpet and upholstery, and to minimize eating food that’s touched take-out containers and wrapping, whose nonstick surfaces may contain PFAS. Many other consumer products contain these chemicals; referring to a list of PFAS-free products can help consumers make decisions that limit exposure. Whatever decisions you make, be aware there’s some uncertainty that’s unavoidable when it comes to these extraordinarily common chemicals. Wynn-Stelt tries to minimize her risk but really wants to see industry take more responsibility for reducing consumers’ exposure, both by reducing PFAS use and clearly labeling products that contain the chemicals. “Knowledge is power,” she says, “and consumers really can drive the economy.”

The bottom half of a person wearing gray rubber boots and turquoise rubber gloves is pictured leaning over and holding a bottle to a stream of running water.
Water being sampled for PFAS testing in Salindres, France, in April 2024. | Pascal Guyot/AFP via Getty Images

A roadmap for PFAS risk, testing, and more.

In 1992, Sandy Wynn-Stelt and her husband Joel bought a house they loved in a wooded area near Grand Rapids, Michigan. Twenty-four years later, Joel abruptly died of liver cancer; the year after that, state authorities knocked on Sandy’s door to ask if they could test the private well that supplied her home’s drinking water.

That water, it turned out, had 38,000 parts per trillion of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, otherwise known as PFAS. And the results were even higher on repeat testing. The chemicals had leached into her and her neighbors’ wells from the surrounding aquifer, into which the Wolverine Worldwide shoe company had been dumping its tannery waste for years.

The attorney Wynn-Stelt hired suggested she get her blood checked for PFAS, and when her stratospherically high levels came back, “everybody’s jaw hit the floor,” she says.

Her doctor, initially flummoxed, knew of a study that had found high cancer and disease risks in thousands exposed to PFAS over the course of a half-century near a West Virginia DuPont plant (an event that received renewed attention after the 2019 release of the film Dark Waters). Soon after, Wynn-Stelt was diagnosed with thyroid cancer — a very treatable condition with an excellent prognosis, but still a shock.

Wynn-Stelt feels lucky her doctor took her seriously and responded proactively. She’s since helped create a medical education video aimed at clinicians, but realizes many patients and providers still struggle to find a way forward when PFAS exposure is on the list of health concerns. “How do we get doctors to pay attention to that along with the 3,000 other things?” she says.

PFAS isn’t just one chemical, but thousands of different chemicals used in a range of industrial processes, many of which involve making products slick, nonstick, or waterproof. Unlike some other synthetic chemicals, they’re extraordinarily hard to break apart: They degrade especially slowly in the environment and in human bodies, leading to the moniker “forever chemicals.”

For decades, companies dumped PFAS directly into the natural environment, including rivers and aquifers, contaminating drinking water in many parts of the US. Additionally, consumer products shed the chemicals onto surfaces in our homes and into the food we eat. As a consequence, experts believe most people have some quantity of PFAS in their bodies.

In early April, the Environmental Protection Agency set the first national limits for six PFAS chemicals in drinking water; water purveyors will have five years to comply. While that’s an important step, it doesn’t address the broader problem of the US’s broken policy regulating the chemical industry’s safety practices — policies made even more favorable to industry under the Trump administration.

“The number of PFAS that are going out into our environment under the aegis of trade secrecy is very substantial,” says Alan Ducatman, a retired physician who led several PFAS research projects at West Virginia University and now consults for consumer health advocacy groups.

In a world where our environment’s safety is so closely tethered to capitalist interests, understanding how to manage and make decisions about environmental risks rests on patients and providers — even though it shouldn’t. Here’s what you need to know about assessing your PFAS exposure risk, getting tested, and working with a health care provider to find a way forward.

Do I need to worry about PFAS?

High PFAS levels are associated with a range of health problems, including high cholesterol, some cancers, and immune system disorders; some health consequences linked with the chemicals also appear to be present with low blood PFAS levels.

While their health risks are concerning — and scientists still have a lot to learn about them — it can be helpful to think of PFAS in the context of some other common toxins, says Ducatman. If you had “the choice between smoking a pack [of cigarettes] a day or being in one of those high-PFAS populations,” he says, “high-PFAS population is way safer.” However, health-minded people can avoid cigarettes, while they don’t have the option of not drinking water — and the more experts understand about PFAS’s links to human disease, the more concerned they get.

A reasonable first step toward understanding your own PFAS risk is looking into the safety of your drinking water over the years and reviewing your employment history. That’s because people with high PFAS levels typically get them either by drinking contaminated water on a frequent basis or through extended on-the-job exposure, said Jamie DeWitt, a PFAS researcher who directs Oregon State University’s Environmental Health Sciences Center.

It’s not as straightforward as it should be to get information about the PFAS levels in your drinking water. The Environmental Working Group maintains a map of tap water levels from all over the US, but its data is far from complete — for example, no data from New York City is included.

Several experts told me that for people in metropolitan areas, the best way to get information about your local water source is by contacting your water purveyor directly. Your mileage may vary: Although my local paper reported recent monitoring (mandated by the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule of the Safe Drinking Water Act) showed PFAS in Atlanta drinking water, details were not readily available from the Atlanta Department of Watershed Management on the website or over the phone.

Smaller water utilities not covered by that rule might not gather this data, and if you get your water from a private well, you’d need to get it tested to know if its water contains PFAS, says DeWitt.

“If you’re exposed to less than four parts per trillion” — the level set by the EPA in the latest regulations — “you can generally anticipate that your health risks are relatively low. Not nonexistent, but relatively low,” DeWitt says. People whose drinking water has higher levels and hasn’t been filtered (more on that later) may be at increased risk.

When it comes to assessing your occupational risk, you can start with the PFAS exposure history on the US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry website. At highest risk are people who work in facilities that produce PFAS chemicals, and people whose jobs use products that contain lots of PFAS, including firefighters, carpet installers, ski waxers, and people in hospitality who handle a lot of food packaging.

You can also ask your doctor to help you assess your risk. Even if they don’t have expertise in environmental health, lots of information and training is available to get them up to speed: Several experts recommended the resources on the clinician section of the PFAS REACH (Research, Education, and Action for Community Health) website, and the lengthy but well-organized document published by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM).

What does PFAS testing look like?

If you or your provider determines you’re likely to have been exposed to a relatively high amount of PFAS, the next step is getting your levels tested. Insurance companies don’t typically cover these tests, and it costs between $300 and $500 out of pocket.

Although tests aren’t done by most hospital labs, Quest Diagnostics recently began offering a PFAS test. Usually, the test is done on blood obtained through a routine blood draw, although some tests can also be conducted on urine.

Ducatman cautions that testing is somewhat limited in what it can tell you. “What people want to know is two things: ‘What’s my PFAS levels,’” he says, “and ‘What are my risks from that,’ which the test doesn’t interpret for you.” That’s partly because the levels testing labs define as normal are sometimes based on old data — and partly because the industries that produce PFAS are constantly creating chemicals to replace the ones restricted by regulation, he said.

To explain what makes PFAS testing so complicated, says Courtney Carignan, an environmental exposure scientist at Michigan State University, it’s worth comparing the chemicals to another well-described environmental toxin: lead. It’s much simpler to identify in the environment and in people, partly because it’s just one substance. “The thing that makes PFAS more difficult is that there’s so many of them,” she says, “so we are playing this whack-a-mole game.”

While commercially available PFAS tests might not yield data on all of the thousands of PFAS chemicals that could be in a person’s body, it’s still a reasonable place to start when it comes to understanding the individual risk of health outcomes related to these chemicals.

How can I minimize the negative consequences of high PFAS levels?

When a patient comes to a health care provider with abnormal results from a PFAS test, there’s a non-zero chance they’ll get a blank stare. “That’s the way health care practitioners are educated — toxicology is just a really small piece of their education,” says DeWitt.

Again, patients can point their providers to resources published by PFAS REACH and NASEM to help guide the way forward. These organizations differ slightly in their approaches to medical monitoring for PFAS effects, but both recommend that people with high blood levels of the chemicals get blood and urine tests on a regular basis to check for high cholesterol and abnormal liver, kidney, and thyroid function. They also recommend regular urine tests to check for certain kidney conditions, regular screening for testicular cancer and ulcerative colitis (which usually starts with a physical exam and may involve some testing), and screening for breast cancer (which may mean getting more mammograms than otherwise recommended).

Experts also recommend providers speak with patients about the likelihood of PFAS transmission to newborns through pregnancy and breastfeeding, and inform them that high levels of the chemicals may inhibit responses to vaccines.

There’s no Food and Drug Administration-approved treatment to lower PFAS levels.

What everyone can do to prevent PFAS exposure to begin with

Although it’s almost impossible to completely avoid contact with PFAS, you can take some steps to reduce your exposure. Filtering your drinking water can help lower its PFAS levels, whether you do it with the first-line (but pricey) reverse osmosis under-sink filters or the cheaper (but still pretty good) carbon filters in pitchers, sinks, and refrigerators.

It can also help to avoid waterproofing and stain-resistance treatments for carpet and upholstery, and to minimize eating food that’s touched take-out containers and wrapping, whose nonstick surfaces may contain PFAS. Many other consumer products contain these chemicals; referring to a list of PFAS-free products can help consumers make decisions that limit exposure.

Whatever decisions you make, be aware there’s some uncertainty that’s unavoidable when it comes to these extraordinarily common chemicals. Wynn-Stelt tries to minimize her risk but really wants to see industry take more responsibility for reducing consumers’ exposure, both by reducing PFAS use and clearly labeling products that contain the chemicals. “Knowledge is power,” she says, “and consumers really can drive the economy.”

Read the full story here.
Photos courtesy of

California regulators approve rules to curb methane leaks and prevent fires at landfills

California air regulators adopted new rules designed to reduce methane leaks and better respond to disastrous underground fires at landfills statewide.

In one of the most important state environmental decisions this year, California air regulators adopted new rules designed to reduce methane leaks and better respond to disastrous underground fires at landfills statewide. California Air Resources Board members voted 12-0 on Thursday to approve a batch of new regulations for the state’s nearly 200 large landfills, designed to minimize the release of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas produced by decomposing organic waste. Landfills are California’s second-largest source of methane emissions, following only the state’s large dairy cow and livestock herds.The new requirements will force landfill operators to install additional pollution controls; more comprehensively investigate methane leaks on parts of landfills that are inaccessible with on-the-ground monitoring using new technology like drones and satellites; and fix equipment breakdowns much faster. Landfill operators also will be required to repair leaks identified through California’s new satellite-detection program. The regulation is expected to prevent the release of 17,000 metric tons of methane annually — an amount capable of warming the atmosphere as much as 110,000 gas-fired cars driven for a year. It also will curtail other harmful landfill pollution, such as lung-aggravating sulfur and cancer-causing benzene. Landfill operators will be required to keep better track of high temperatures and take steps to minimize the fire risks that heat could create. There are underground fires burning in at least two landfills in Southern California — smoldering chemical reactions that are incinerating buried garbage, releasing toxic fumes and spewing liquid waste. Regulators found explosive levels of methane emanating from many other landfills across the state.During the three-hour Air Resources Board hearing preceding the vote, several Californians who live near Chiquita Canyon Landfill — one of the known sites where garbage is burning deep underground — implored the board to act to prevent disasters in other communities across the state.“If these rules were already updated, maybe my family wouldn’t be sick,” said Steven Howse, a 27-year resident of Val Verde. “My house wouldn’t be for sale. My close friend and neighbor would still live next door to me. And I wouldn’t be pleading with you right now. You have the power to change this.”Landfill operators, including companies and local governments, voiced their concern about the costs and labor needed to comply with the regulation. “We want to make sure that the rule is implementable for our communities, not unnecessarily burdensome,” said John Kennedy, a senior policy advocate for Rural County Representatives of California, a nonprofit organization representing 40 of the state’s 58 counties, many of which own and operate landfills. “While we support the overarching goals of the rule, we remain deeply concerned about specific measures including in the regulation.”Lauren Sanchez, who was appointed chair of the California Air Resources Board in October, recently attended the United Nations’ COP30 climate conference in Brazil with Gov. Gavin Newsom. What she learned at the summit, she said, made clear to her that California’s methane emissions have international consequences, and that the state has an imperative to reduce them. “The science is clear, acting now to reduce emissions of methane and other short-lived climate pollutants is the best way to immediately slow the pace of climate change,” Sanchez said.

Exoplanet atmospheres are a key to habitability

The habitable zone of a planet might be key to whether life can survive there. But so are exoplanet atmospheres, scientists say. The post Exoplanet atmospheres are a key to habitability first appeared on EarthSky.

Artist’s concept of exoplanet GJ 9827 d. It might be a steam world, with lots of water vapor in its atmosphere. Astronomers say exoplanet atmospheres are a key to whether or not life could survive on a planet. Image via NASA/ ESA/ Leah Hustak (STScI)/ Ralf Crawford (STScI)/ University of Montreal. Scientists focus on the habitable zone (where liquid water might exist) when they are gauging whether an exoplanet could be habitable. But exoplanet atmospheres are also key to whether a planet can maintain stable, life-supporting conditions. For life to persist on a planet, the environment must be stable. A planet’s surface, oceans and atmosphere can work together to regulate the system. By Morgan Underwood, Rice University EarthSky isn’t powered by billionaires. We’re powered by you.Support EarthSky’s 2025 Donation Campaign and help keep science accessible. Exoplanet atmospheres are a key to habitability When astronomers search for planets that could host liquid water on their surface, they start by looking at a star’s habitable zone. Water is a key ingredient for life, and on a planet too close to its star, water on its surface may boil. Too far, and it could freeze. This zone marks the region in-between. But being in this sweet spot doesn’t automatically mean a planet is hospitable to life. Other factors, like whether a planet is geologically active or has processes that regulate gases in its atmosphere, play a role. The habitable zone provides a useful guide to search for signs of life on exoplanets, or planets outside our solar system orbiting other stars. But what’s in these planets’ atmospheres holds the next clue about whether liquid water – and possibly life – exists beyond Earth. The greenhouse effect On Earth, the greenhouse effect, caused by gases like carbon dioxide and water vapor, keeps the planet warm enough for liquid water and life as we know it. Without an atmosphere, Earth’s surface temperature would average around 0 degrees Fahrenheit (-18 C), far below the freezing point of water. The boundaries of the habitable zone are defined by how much of a greenhouse effect is necessary to maintain the surface temperatures that allow for liquid water to persist. It’s a balance between sunlight and atmospheric warming. Many planetary scientists, including me, are seeking to understand if the processes responsible for regulating Earth’s climate are operating on other habitable-zone worlds. We use what we know about Earth’s geology and climate to predict how these processes might appear elsewhere. That is where my geoscience expertise comes in. Picturing the habitable zone of a solar system analog, with Venus- and Mars-like planets outside of the “just right” temperature zone. Image via NASA. Why the habitable zone? The habitable zone is a simple and powerful idea, and for good reason. It provides a starting point, directing astronomers to where they might expect to find planets with liquid water. But without needing to know every detail about the planet’s atmosphere or history. Its definition is partially informed by what scientists know about Earth’s rocky neighbors. Mars, which lies just outside the outer edge of the habitable zone, shows clear evidence of ancient rivers and lakes where liquid water once flowed. Similarly, Venus is currently too close to the sun to be within the habitable zone. Yet, some geochemical evidence and modeling studies suggest Venus may have had water in its past. Though how much and for how long remains uncertain. These examples show that while the habitable zone is not a perfect predictor of habitability, it provides a useful starting point. How to have a stable environment What the habitable zone doesn’t do is determine whether a planet can sustain habitable conditions over long periods of time. On Earth, a stable climate allowed life to emerge and persist. Liquid water could remain on the surface, giving slow chemical reactions enough time to build the molecules of life. This let early ecosystems develop resilience to change, which reinforced habitability. Life emerged on Earth, but continued to reshape the environments it evolved in, making them more conducive to life. This stability likely unfolded over hundreds of millions of years, as the planet’s surface, oceans and atmosphere worked together as part of a slow but powerful system to regulate Earth’s temperature. Recycling inorganic carbon A key part of this system is how Earth recycles inorganic carbon between the atmosphere, surface and oceans over the course of millions of years. Inorganic carbon refers to carbon bound in atmospheric gases, dissolved in seawater or locked in minerals, rather than biological material. This part of the carbon cycle acts like a natural thermostat. When volcanoes release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, the carbon dioxide molecules trap heat and warm the planet. As temperatures rise, rain and weathering draw carbon out of the air and store it in rocks and oceans. If the planet cools, this process slows down. This allows carbon dioxide, a warming greenhouse gas, to build up in the atmosphere again. This part of the carbon cycle has helped Earth recover from past ice ages and avoid runaway warming. Even as the sun has gradually brightened, this cycle has contributed to keeping temperatures on Earth within a range where liquid water and life can persist for long spans of time. Similar cycles in exoplanet atmospheres? Now, scientists are asking whether similar geological processes might operate on other planets. And if so, how they might detect them. For example, if researchers could observe enough rocky planets in their stars’ habitable zones, they could look for a pattern connecting the amount of sunlight a planet receives and how much carbon dioxide is in its atmosphere. Finding such a pattern may hint that the same kind of carbon-cycling process could be operating elsewhere. The mix of gases in a planet’s atmosphere is shaped by what’s happening on or below its surface. One study shows that measuring atmospheric carbon dioxide in a number of rocky planets could reveal whether their surfaces are broken into a number of moving plates, like Earth’s, or if their crusts are more rigid. On Earth, these shifting plates drive volcanism and rock weathering, which are key to carbon cycling. Simulation of what space telescopes, like the Habitable Worlds Observatory, will capture when looking at distant solar systems. Image via STScI/ NASA GSFC. Keeping an eye on distant exoplanet atmospheres The next step will be toward gaining a population-level perspective of planets in their stars’ habitable zones. By analyzing atmospheric data from many rocky planets, researchers can look for trends that reveal the influence of underlying planetary processes, such as the carbon cycle. Scientists could then compare these patterns with a planet’s position in the habitable zone. Doing so would allow them to test whether the zone accurately predicts where habitable conditions are possible, or whether some planets maintain conditions suitable for liquid water beyond the zone’s edges. This kind of approach is especially important given the diversity of exoplanets. Many exoplanets fall into categories that don’t exist in our solar system. These include super Earths and mini Neptunes. Others orbit stars smaller and cooler than the sun. NASA’s Habitable Worlds Observatory The datasets needed to explore and understand this diversity are just on the horizon. NASA’s upcoming Habitable Worlds Observatory will be the first space telescope designed specifically to search for signs of habitability and life on planets orbiting other stars. It will directly image Earth-sized planets around sunlike stars to study their atmospheres in detail. Instruments on the observatory will analyze starlight passing through these atmospheres to detect gases like carbon dioxide, methane, water vapor and oxygen. As starlight filters through a planet’s atmosphere, different molecules absorb specific wavelengths of light, leaving behind a chemical fingerprint that reveals which gases are present. These compounds offer insight into the processes shaping these worlds. The Habitable Worlds Observatory is under active scientific and engineering development, with a potential launch targeted for the 2030s. Combined with today’s telescopes, which are increasingly capable of observing atmospheres of Earth-sized worlds, scientists may soon be able to determine whether the same planetary processes that regulate Earth’s climate are common throughout the galaxy, or uniquely our own. NASA’s planned Habitable Worlds Observatory will look for exoplanets that could potentially host life. Morgan Underwood, Ph.D. Candidate in Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Rice University This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Bottom line: The habitable zone of a planet might be key to whether life can survive there. But so are exoplanet atmospheres, scientists say.The post Exoplanet atmospheres are a key to habitability first appeared on EarthSky.

Some California landfills are on fire and leaking methane. Newly proposed rules could make them safer

California is considering adopting new rules to better identify and more quickly to respond to dangerous methane leaks and underground fires at landfills statewide.

A vast canyon of buried garbage has been smoldering inside a landfill in the Santa Clarita Valley, inducing geysers of liquid waste onto the surface and noxious fumes into the air.In the Inland Empire, several fires have broken out on the surface of another landfill. In the San Fernando Valley, an elementary school has occasionally canceled recess due to toxic gases emanating from rain-soaked, rotting garbage from a nearby landfill. And, in the San Francisco Bay Area, burrowing rodents may be digging into entombed trash at a landfill-turned-park, unloosing explosive levels of methane.These are just a few of the treacherous episodes that have recently transpired at landfills in California, subjecting the state’s waste management industry to growing scrutiny by residents and regulators.Landfill emissions — produced by decaying food, paper and other organic waste — are a major source of planet-warming greenhouse gases and harmful air pollution statewide. But mismanagement, aging equipment and inadequate oversight have worsened this pollution in recent years, according to environmental regulators and policy experts.This week, the California Air Resources Board will vote on adopting a new slate of requirements to better identify and more quickly respond to methane leaks and disastrous underground fires at large landfills statewide.The proposal calls for using satellites, drones and other new technologies to more comprehensively investigate methane leaks. It also would require landfill operators to take corrective action within a few days of finding methane leaks or detecting elevated temperatures within their pollution control systems.In recent years, state regulators have pinpointed at least two landfills in Southern California experiencing “rare” underground landfill fires — largely uncontrollable disasters that have burned troves of buried garbage and released toxic fumes into the air. More recently, a new state satellite program has detected 17 methane plumes from nine landfills between July and October, potentially leaking the flammable gas into unwanted areas and contributing to climate change.Proponents of the proposed rule say the added oversight could help reduce California’s second-largest source of methane, a potent greenhouse gas that warms the atmosphere much more than carbon dioxide. It could also bring relief to hundreds of thousands of people who live nearby landfills and may be exposed to toxic pollutants like hydrogen sulfide or benzene.“Curbing methane emissions is a relatively quick and cost-effective way to reduce the greenhouse pollution that’s wreaking havoc with our climate,” said Bill Magavern, policy director at the Coalition for Clean Air. “But [we’ve] also been involved in updating and strengthening the rule because we’re seeing the community impacts of leaking landfills, particularly at places like Chiquita Canyon, where we have a landfill fire that is making people in the community sick.”Nearly 200 landfills statewide would be subject to the proposed requirements — 48 are privately owned and 140 are government-owned.Many landfill operators oppose the rule, saying the new requirements would saddle the industry with an untenable workload and millions of dollars each year in added costs. These costs could be passed on to residents, whose garbage fees have already risen significantly in recent years.Sacramento County officials, who operate the Kiefer Landfill, said the proposed protocols were not feasible. “As a public landfill, Kiefer cannot quickly adapt to regulatory shifts of this magnitude, and these increased costs would ultimately burden the community it serves,” Sacramento County officials wrote in a Nov. 10 letter to the state Air Resources Board.The vast majority of landfills are already required to monitor for leaks and operate a gas collection system — a network of wells that extend deep into the layers of buried waste to capture and destroy methane.A hot messChiquita Canyon Landfill in Castaic has become the poster child for the issues plaguing California’s waste management system.A blistering-hot chemical reaction began inside the landfill’s main canyon in May 2022, roasting garbage in a roughly 30-acre area.Starting in April 2023, residents of Castaic and nearby Val Verde began to take notice. They called in thousands of odor complaints to the South Coast Air Quality Management District, with many citing headaches, nausea, nosebleeds and difficulty breathing.Later that year, state regulators learned that the landfill’s temperatures had risen above 200 degrees, melting plastic pipes used to collect landfill gases. An air district inspector also witnessed geysers of liquid waste bursting onto the surface and white smoke venting from large cracks spreading across the reaction area.Air sampling found elevated levels of lung-aggravating sulfur pollutants and cancer-causing benzene. Air samples in 2023 detected benzene concentrations more than eight times higher than the state’s short-term health limit at Hasley Canyon Park, which abuts Live Oak Elementary School, alarming local parents.“I personally have transferred my children to different schools further away,” said Jennifer Elkins, a Val Verde resident whose children attended Live Oak. “I spend three hours a day driving my kids to and from school. The commute has been a sacrifice, but it’s also been well worth it, because I know my children are breathing cleaner air, and I have seen their health improve.”The landfill, owned by Texas-based Waste Connections, installed new heat-resistant equipment to extract liquid waste in an attempt to reduce broiling temperatures. It also installed a large covering over the affected area to suppress odors. It permanently closed and ceased accepting waste this year.Still, the reaction area has tripled in size and could consume the entire 160-acre canyon for many more years. During other underground landfill fires, elevated temperatures have persisted for more than a decade.The issue is, once these broiling temperatures start consuming landfill waste, there’s little that landfill operators can do to snuff them out.The fumes from Chiquita Canyon have pushed some longtime residents to consider moving. After more than 25 years in Val Verde, Abigail DeSesa is contemplating starting anew somewhere else.“This is our life’s investment — our forever home that we were building for retirement and on the verge of paying off,” DeSesa said. “And we may have to start over.”“I don’t know that I can outlast it,” DeSesa added.Chiquita Canyon is not alone.Earlier this year, the South Coast air district learned about another fiery chemical reaction brewing inside El Sobrante Landfill in Corona. In August, Waste Management, the landfill’s owner and operator, acknowledged there was a two-acre “area of concern” where landfill staff had observed temperatures climbing above 200 degrees. Riverside County inspectors also found several fires had ignited on the landfill’s surface in recent years, according to public records.Environmental advocates fear that many more landfills may be on the precipice of these largely unmanageable disasters.According to an analysis by California Communities Against Toxics, there are 18 landfills in California that have had prolonged heat signatures detected by NASA’s Fire Information for Resource Management System, an online tool using satellite instruments to detect fires and thermal anomalies.At least 11 of these landfills requested and received permission from either federal or local environmental regulators to continue operating with higher temperatures than currently allowed, according to public records obtained by the environmental organization.These regulatory exemptions are part of the problem, said Jane Williams, the group’s executive director.“We have 11 landfills across California that have been granted waivers by the government to basically ‘hot rod’ the landfill,” Williams said. “We would really like EPA and state agencies to stop granting landfill waivers. It’s a permission slip to speed in a school zone.”Under newly proposed revisions to state rules, operators must be more transparent in disclosing the temperatures in their gas collection systems. If operators detect elevated temperatures, they must take action to minimize the amount of oxygen in the landfill.While these rule changes might be coming too late to fix the issues near Chiquita Canyon, locals hope it will help others who live in the orbit of the nearly 200 other large landfills in California that could be subject to these rules.“While there’s still a fight here to try to address the concerns at Chiquita Canyon Landfill, we know that there’s an opportunity to really prevent this kind of disaster from happening anywhere else in our state,” said Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo.Dangerous leaksMeanwhile, many other landfills are releasing unsafe amounts of methane, an odorless gas produced by bacteria that break down organic waste.These emissions present two critical issues.First, methane is a powerful greenhouse gas — capable of warming the atmosphere 80 times more than the same amount of carbon dioxide over 20 years. Following California’s large dairy and livestock operations, landfills emit the second-most methane statewide.Second, methane is the primary constituent in natural gas. It can ignite or explode at certain concentrations, presenting a serious safety risk in the event of uncontrolled releases. Several times over the last few years, regulators have detected potentially explosive concentrations in the air and shallow soil near several landfills.Under current landfill regulations, operators are required to monitor for excessive methane leaks four times a year. Many operators hire contractors to walk across accessible portions of the landfill with a handheld leak-monitoring device, an approach that some environmental advocates say is unreliable.In addition, some areas of the landfill are not screened for methane leaks if operators consider them to be unsafe to walk across, due to, for example, steep hills or ongoing construction activities.“Landfills have to monitor surface emissions, but they do that in a very inefficient way, using outdated technology,” Magavern said.Starting this past summer, California has partnered with the nonprofit organization Carbon Mapper to use satellites to detect methane leaks, and already has found 17 coming from landfills. In one case, researchers saw a large methane plume appear to emanate from Newby Island Landfill in San José and drift into a nearby residential neighborhood.Although the state has notified these landfill operators, it currently cannot require them to repair leaks detected via satellite. That would change under the proposed amendments to the state’s landfill regulations. Operators would also have to use state-approved technology to routinely scan portions of their landfills they deem inaccessible.The proposed amendments seek to prevent the most common causes of methane emissions. A series of surveys of landfill operators found 43% of leaks in recent years were caused by one or more of a facility’s gas collection wells being offline at the time.The new rules would require that such wells can only be offline for up to five days at a time for repairs. Operators would also be required to install gas collection systems within six months of when garbage is first placed in a new part of a landfill — rather than the 18-month time frame currently allowed.In addition, landfills would be forced to take actions to fix a leak within three days of detection, rather than 10 days. In theory, that should help reduce the risk of leaks from things like cracks in landfill covers (typically a layer of soil or plastic covering) and damaged components of gas collection systems — two other major sources of leaks that landfill operators have reported.The amended landfill rules could collectively cost private companies and local governments $12 million annually.Some say that’s well worth the cost.A contingent of residents who live near Chiquita Canyon Landfill are flying to Sacramento to attend the state Air Resources Board meeting. They are expected to testify on how the fire and landfill emissions have unraveled the fabric of the semi-rural community.Elkins, the Val Verde resident, appreciated the area’s natural beauty — picturesque hillsides, wildlife and opportunities for stargazing without bright city lights. However, now her family hardly spends any time outdoors due to the noxious odors.Some of her neighbors have moved away, but Elkins and many other longtime locals cannot, no matter how they fear for their health and safety. “The homes are not selling,” she said. “Other homes sit vacant, and community members are paying two mortgages just to get away. And for many of us, it would be financial suicide to move away and start over somewhere new.”

New Texas petrochemical facilities are mostly in low income areas, communities of color, study finds

Researchers evaluated the neighborhoods around 89 proposed or expanding petrochemical facilities across the state using a screening tool from the EPA.

Environment Researchers evaluated the neighborhoods around 89 proposed or expanding petrochemical facilities across the state using a screening tool from the EPA. David J. Phillip/APThis aerial photo shows the TPC petrochemical plant near downtown Houston, background, on Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2017. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)A recent report from Texas Southern University found that new and expanding petrochemical facilities in Texas are overwhelmingly located in low-income neighborhoods and communities of color. Researchers evaluated the neighborhoods around 89 proposed or expanding petrochemical facilities across the state using a screening tool from the Environmental Protection Agency. They looked at air pollution and proximity to other "hazardous facilities" in the areas. Data related to the race, education, income level and languages within the areas was also collected. Sign up for the Hello, Houston! daily newsletter to get local reports like this delivered directly to your inbox. "The communities that are on the fenceline are getting pollution and they also are getting poverty," said Robert Bullard, one of the study's authors. "And also, if you look at the infrastructures within those neighborhoods that have these facilities, they are of poor quality." The report found that 9 in 10 of the facilities are located in counties with "higher demographic vulnerability" – meaning they had more people of color, more low-income residents, or both, compared to the state and national averages. Over half of the new facilities were slated to be built in communities that have a higher proportion of people of color than the national average. Meanwhile, 30% of the facilities were slated to be built in areas with a poverty rate higher than the national average. "Segregation and racial redlining actually segregated pollution, and it segregated people," Bullard said. The analysis also found that the proposed facilities were being built in areas that are already struggling with air pollution. About 1 in 5 of the proposed facilities are located within the top 10% of areas nationwide with the highest amount of particulate matter pollution, and 46% of the new facilities are slated to be built within the top 10% of communities across the country with the highest amount of air toxins. The facilities were concentrated in 9% of Texas counties, with nearly half of them located in Harris County or Jefferson County.

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