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How to protect yourself from 'forever chemicals'

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Thursday, March 14, 2024

"Forever chemicals" are everywhere — but there are significant steps consumers can take to protect themselves against the toxic substances, leading environmental engineers said. “We are living in a mega-experiment,” Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) environmental engineer Mohamed Ateaia Ibrahim told attendees on Tuesday at SXSW. For decades, the government has implemented few regulations on per- and polyfluorinated substances (PFAS), a vast class of degradation-resistant chemicals linked to a staggering array of health impacts, he said. Last month, the EPA proposed designating nine PFAS as “hazardous” — but there are nearly 15,000 such chemicals in existence, and for many of the substances, there may be no safe level of exposure. If there is a safe level, that level is very low: Many public water utilities consider the safe threshold for PFAS to be 20 parts per trillion — nearly a thousand times lower than the threshold considered safe for lead pollution. The chemicals have become pervasive, with research finding them in many U.S. waterways and consumer products. Asked where he was surprised to find PFAS, Ibrahim laughed ruefully. “I’d be lying if I said I get surprised anymore, because it’s everywhere,” he said. “Where you can you find PFAS? It’s there, just waiting for someone to analyze it.” “But discovering PFAS in toilet paper — that was … unpleasant,” he added. The ubiquity of forever chemicals makes it “hard to do something that will completely eliminate your exposure,” said Leslie Hamilton, a materials scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. But consumers “can reduce it significantly,” Hamilton said. In particular, Hamilton and Ibrahim said that consumers could reduce their risk by checking food and clothing packaging, and by finding out if their local water utility tests for forever chemicals.  First, Hamilton said, customers can ask their municipal water treatment plants if they test for PFAS. “Local water treatment facilities tend to pick up the phone, and they’ll talk to you,” she said. When it comes to products they buy or interact with, both scientists said that consumers should be far more cautious around anything — from furniture and carpeting to clothing — that is stain, heat or grease-resistant. “Since I’ve been in the field, I’ve learned more about my own and my family’s exposure risk,” Hamilton said. She noted that PFAS exposure is of particular concern for the growing bodies of babies and young children, as well as fetuses in utero who can absorb the chemicals through their mothers’ exposure. “Since I learned that the lining in popcorn bags is PFAS, we’ve switched to an air popper, and there are other small replacements you can make, like switching from Teflon pans to cast iron,” Hamilton said. The nonprofits GreenScreen and PFAS Central also maintain comprehensive lists of PFAS-free products, from apparel to baby goods to furniture. “But I decided not to live in fear, because you're never going to be able to completely eliminate your exposure,” Hamilton said. This consumer-awareness approach has limits. Many industries use PFAS as part of the manufacturing process used to make goods ostensibly free of the chemicals, the environmental engineers noted. Many industries “actually use it without knowing that they're using PFAS,” Ibrahim said. The broad question for consumers and society alike, he added, is whether the added performance benefits of PFAS justifies the risk of exposure. “People need to think. Our society is relying on chemicals, but we have to understand it’s a risky business — and to get to something that will replace PFAS will take time. The difficulty of replacing PFAS stems not just from their usefulness but their ubiquity — a market share that was enabled in large part by the industry’s reluctance over the past 70 years to share the growing evidence that the compounds were dangerous, according to research from the University of California, San Francisco. Documents uncovered by UCSF show “that the chemical industry knew about the dangers of PFAS and failed to let the public, regulators, and even their own employees know the risks,”  Tracey Woodruff, a former EPA scientist and UCSF professor of reproductive sciences said in a statement. The understanding of PFAS risks has grown in tandem with the chemicals themselves, according to an Environmental Working Group timeline.  The first of the now-ubiquitous class of fluorinated compounds was invented by Dupont chemist Roy Plunkett in 1938. Teflon, the first commercial PFAS product, came to market in 1946.  By 1950, chemical giant 3M found that PFAS chemicals were toxic to mice. In 1956, Stanford researchers found that they also bound themselves to human blood proteins. But even as this internal knowledge grew, reports have found, companies suppressed it. The UCSF meta-analysis published in 2023 in the Annals of Global Health went through decades of internal industry documents to show “that companies knew PFAS was ‘highly toxic when inhaled and moderately toxic when ingested' by 1970, forty years before the public health community.” One decisive event that broke through that wall of silence was the 2017 settlement by Dupont of a massive class-action suit brought by West Virginia residents poisoned by the thousands of pounds of PFAS-like chemicals dumped into rural waterways. Dupont sought to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that proof of pollution didn't equate to proof of harm. The lawsuit “rests on a mistaken premise: the premise that any discharge of chemicals into the environment” creates legal liability, the company said. “To be actionable, however, a discharge of chemicals must cause the plaintiff to suffer actual harm.” For its part, the American Chemistry Council (ACC), the trade group for chemicals, argues that this “diverse universe of chemistries” is “essential to modern life.”  ACC says that "forever chemicals" is a pejorative coined by activists to frame “PFAS’ primary benefits of strengthened durability and functionality as a liability."  In 2019, Dupont announced it was “learning from the past” and scaling back, though not eliminating, its use of PFAS, according to chief technology officer Alexa Dembek. The company now says its use of PFAS “is limited. We have systems, processes and protocols in place ensuring that PFAS is used safely, controlled to the highest standards and minimized.” And last year, 3M agreed to pay $10.3 billion over the next 10 years to help public water utilities clean up any PFAS they find. The company has also said it would stop making PFAS by 2025. “We got here because PFAS was this miracle chemical,” Hamilton said.  She paraphrased a quote from "Dark Waters," the Mark Ruffalo movie about the West Virginia suit: “People weren’t saying I want PFAS in my corn muffins, but they wanted corn muffins not to stick to the muffin pans, you know, so it was just so good. And so it got to be so prolific before we knew anything about the dangers.  “And so regulations are catching up, but it's always just not going to be as fast as maybe the information” getting to the public, she said. A letter last September by the United Nations office of Human Rights suggested another possibility: that the chemical companies had used their influence with the EPA itself to head off regulation. The companies had “impermissibly captured the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and delayed its efforts to properly regulate PFAS chemicals,” the U.N. rapporteurs wrote. That letter called out the federal government for failing to criminally prosecute “massive, serious, and widespread PFAS contamination caused by DuPont.” The Hill has reached out to the EPA for comment. But another key change is that PFAS have gotten easier to find: Over the past decades, exponential advances in chemical analysis that allowed the chemicals to be detected at far lower concentrations than before, Ibrahim noted. That ability to find PFAS at lower and lower concentrations coupled with the growing awareness by endocrinologists that minuscule levels of PFAS were disruptive to the body’s endocrine system, Hamiton said. “Our bodies are some of the most exquisite sensors,” she said — meaning if the endocrine system is looking for a particular hormone, it may be disrupted by even extremely low levels of a PFAS molecule that looks similar. The same properties that make PFAS so dangerous — like their extreme reluctance to react with other chemicals — make them very hard to study, detect or remove.  That’s because every step from finding them to pulling them from water requires in some way grabbing, trapping or manipulating them with other chemicals — processes which are stymied by the same characteristics that make PFAS so useful in industry. Because they are so unreactive, for example, it’s hard to get them to stick to a sensor to assess how prevalent they are, or to get them to bind to a filter that can remove them. When it comes to cleaning PFAS out of water, the first step is to pull the the chemicals out of the liquid they are dissolved in.  “And there are way to do that now,” Hamilton said — running the contaminated water through activated carbon or ion exchange filters similar to Brita filers. But while those are a good first step, Hamilton said, they only grab long-chain PFAS, not shorter-chain ones – a reference to the number of carbon atoms in the molecule. To get the shorter-chain compounds, researchers use machine learning to create synthetic quarter-shaped filters made out of amphiphilic molecules, which can bind to both waters and fats. But while those can pick up the PFAS, they create a new problem: The filter itself becomes a highly concentrated reservoir of forever chemicals. Throw it in a landfill, and the PFAS leach right back into the water. The simplest method of dispensing with the filter without releasing the chemicals is to burn it, which Hamilton said is “simple and practical” but energy intensive, as well as creating unknown offgases and residues. Ultimately, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laborator, where Hamilton works, is looking at adapting the existing habits of soil bacteria to “capture, destroy it, and capture all the teeny-tiny residues of the PFAS molecules” that are left over, Hamilton said. Because fluorine — the building block of PFAS — is itself toxic, the ultimate goal is finding biochemical processes that convert the fluorine into a stable mineral that can be easily disposed of. Even with all its risks, Hamilton said, “there are still going to be areas where we need it — complex industrial chemistries that rely on it, or certain protective gear where we need oil and water resistance.” The spread of PFAS didn’t happen overnight, and their replacement won’t either, she said. “It took several decades of R&D work” for the current thousands of PFAS compounds to come to market,” she said. “We have to give time to the replacements to go through the same journey.”

"Forever chemicals" are everywhere — but there are significant steps consumers can take to protect themselves against the toxic substances, leading environmental engineers said. “We are living in a mega-experiment,” Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) environmental engineer Mohamed Ateaia Ibrahim told attendees on Tuesday at SXSW. For decades, the government has implemented few regulations on per- and...

"Forever chemicals" are everywhere — but there are significant steps consumers can take to protect themselves against the toxic substances, leading environmental engineers said.

“We are living in a mega-experiment,” Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) environmental engineer Mohamed Ateaia Ibrahim told attendees on Tuesday at SXSW.

For decades, the government has implemented few regulations on per- and polyfluorinated substances (PFAS), a vast class of degradation-resistant chemicals linked to a staggering array of health impacts, he said.

Last month, the EPA proposed designating nine PFAS as “hazardous” — but there are nearly 15,000 such chemicals in existence, and for many of the substances, there may be no safe level of exposure.

If there is a safe level, that level is very low: Many public water utilities consider the safe threshold for PFAS to be 20 parts per trillion — nearly a thousand times lower than the threshold considered safe for lead pollution.

The chemicals have become pervasive, with research finding them in many U.S. waterways and consumer products. Asked where he was surprised to find PFAS, Ibrahim laughed ruefully.

“I’d be lying if I said I get surprised anymore, because it’s everywhere,” he said. “Where you can you find PFAS? It’s there, just waiting for someone to analyze it.”

“But discovering PFAS in toilet paper — that was … unpleasant,” he added.

The ubiquity of forever chemicals makes it “hard to do something that will completely eliminate your exposure,” said Leslie Hamilton, a materials scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.

But consumers “can reduce it significantly,” Hamilton said.

In particular, Hamilton and Ibrahim said that consumers could reduce their risk by checking food and clothing packaging, and by finding out if their local water utility tests for forever chemicals. 

First, Hamilton said, customers can ask their municipal water treatment plants if they test for PFAS. “Local water treatment facilities tend to pick up the phone, and they’ll talk to you,” she said.

When it comes to products they buy or interact with, both scientists said that consumers should be far more cautious around anything — from furniture and carpeting to clothing — that is stain, heat or grease-resistant.

“Since I’ve been in the field, I’ve learned more about my own and my family’s exposure risk,” Hamilton said.

She noted that PFAS exposure is of particular concern for the growing bodies of babies and young children, as well as fetuses in utero who can absorb the chemicals through their mothers’ exposure.

“Since I learned that the lining in popcorn bags is PFAS, we’ve switched to an air popper, and there are other small replacements you can make, like switching from Teflon pans to cast iron,” Hamilton said.

The nonprofits GreenScreen and PFAS Central also maintain comprehensive lists of PFAS-free products, from apparel to baby goods to furniture.

“But I decided not to live in fear, because you're never going to be able to completely eliminate your exposure,” Hamilton said.

This consumer-awareness approach has limits. Many industries use PFAS as part of the manufacturing process used to make goods ostensibly free of the chemicals, the environmental engineers noted.

Many industries “actually use it without knowing that they're using PFAS,” Ibrahim said.

The broad question for consumers and society alike, he added, is whether the added performance benefits of PFAS justifies the risk of exposure.

“People need to think. Our society is relying on chemicals, but we have to understand it’s a risky business — and to get to something that will replace PFAS will take time.

The difficulty of replacing PFAS stems not just from their usefulness but their ubiquity — a market share that was enabled in large part by the industry’s reluctance over the past 70 years to share the growing evidence that the compounds were dangerous, according to research from the University of California, San Francisco.

Documents uncovered by UCSF show “that the chemical industry knew about the dangers of PFAS and failed to let the public, regulators, and even their own employees know the risks,”  Tracey Woodruff, a former EPA scientist and UCSF professor of reproductive sciences said in a statement.

The understanding of PFAS risks has grown in tandem with the chemicals themselves, according to an Environmental Working Group timeline. 

The first of the now-ubiquitous class of fluorinated compounds was invented by Dupont chemist Roy Plunkett in 1938. Teflon, the first commercial PFAS product, came to market in 1946. 

By 1950, chemical giant 3M found that PFAS chemicals were toxic to mice. In 1956, Stanford researchers found that they also bound themselves to human blood proteins.

But even as this internal knowledge grew, reports have found, companies suppressed it.

The UCSF meta-analysis published in 2023 in the Annals of Global Health went through decades of internal industry documents to show “that companies knew PFAS was ‘highly toxic when inhaled and moderately toxic when ingested' by 1970, forty years before the public health community.”

One decisive event that broke through that wall of silence was the 2017 settlement by Dupont of a massive class-action suit brought by West Virginia residents poisoned by the thousands of pounds of PFAS-like chemicals dumped into rural waterways.

Dupont sought to dismiss the lawsuit, arguing that proof of pollution didn't equate to proof of harm.

The lawsuit “rests on a mistaken premise: the premise that any discharge of chemicals into the environment” creates legal liability, the company said.

“To be actionable, however, a discharge of chemicals must cause the plaintiff to suffer actual harm.”

For its part, the American Chemistry Council (ACC), the trade group for chemicals, argues that this “diverse universe of chemistries” is “essential to modern life.” 

ACC says that "forever chemicals" is a pejorative coined by activists to frame “PFAS’ primary benefits of strengthened durability and functionality as a liability." 

In 2019, Dupont announced it was “learning from the past” and scaling back, though not eliminating, its use of PFAS, according to chief technology officer Alexa Dembek.

The company now says its use of PFAS “is limited. We have systems, processes and protocols in place ensuring that PFAS is used safely, controlled to the highest standards and minimized.”

And last year, 3M agreed to pay $10.3 billion over the next 10 years to help public water utilities clean up any PFAS they find. The company has also said it would stop making PFAS by 2025.

“We got here because PFAS was this miracle chemical,” Hamilton said. 

She paraphrased a quote from "Dark Waters," the Mark Ruffalo movie about the West Virginia suit: “People weren’t saying I want PFAS in my corn muffins, but they wanted corn muffins not to stick to the muffin pans, you know, so it was just so good. And so it got to be so prolific before we knew anything about the dangers. 

“And so regulations are catching up, but it's always just not going to be as fast as maybe the information” getting to the public, she said.

A letter last September by the United Nations office of Human Rights suggested another possibility: that the chemical companies had used their influence with the EPA itself to head off regulation.

The companies had “impermissibly captured the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and delayed its efforts to properly regulate PFAS chemicals,” the U.N. rapporteurs wrote.

That letter called out the federal government for failing to criminally prosecute “massive, serious, and widespread PFAS contamination caused by DuPont.”

The Hill has reached out to the EPA for comment.

But another key change is that PFAS have gotten easier to find: Over the past decades, exponential advances in chemical analysis that allowed the chemicals to be detected at far lower concentrations than before, Ibrahim noted.

That ability to find PFAS at lower and lower concentrations coupled with the growing awareness by endocrinologists that minuscule levels of PFAS were disruptive to the body’s endocrine system, Hamiton said.

“Our bodies are some of the most exquisite sensors,” she said — meaning if the endocrine system is looking for a particular hormone, it may be disrupted by even extremely low levels of a PFAS molecule that looks similar.

The same properties that make PFAS so dangerous — like their extreme reluctance to react with other chemicals — make them very hard to study, detect or remove. 

That’s because every step from finding them to pulling them from water requires in some way grabbing, trapping or manipulating them with other chemicals — processes which are stymied by the same characteristics that make PFAS so useful in industry.

Because they are so unreactive, for example, it’s hard to get them to stick to a sensor to assess how prevalent they are, or to get them to bind to a filter that can remove them.

When it comes to cleaning PFAS out of water, the first step is to pull the the chemicals out of the liquid they are dissolved in. 

“And there are way to do that now,” Hamilton said — running the contaminated water through activated carbon or ion exchange filters similar to Brita filers.

But while those are a good first step, Hamilton said, they only grab long-chain PFAS, not shorter-chain ones – a reference to the number of carbon atoms in the molecule.

To get the shorter-chain compounds, researchers use machine learning to create synthetic quarter-shaped filters made out of amphiphilic molecules, which can bind to both waters and fats.

But while those can pick up the PFAS, they create a new problem: The filter itself becomes a highly concentrated reservoir of forever chemicals. Throw it in a landfill, and the PFAS leach right back into the water.

The simplest method of dispensing with the filter without releasing the chemicals is to burn it, which Hamilton said is “simple and practical” but energy intensive, as well as creating unknown offgases and residues.

Ultimately, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laborator, where Hamilton works, is looking at adapting the existing habits of soil bacteria to “capture, destroy it, and capture all the teeny-tiny residues of the PFAS molecules” that are left over, Hamilton said.

Because fluorine — the building block of PFAS — is itself toxic, the ultimate goal is finding biochemical processes that convert the fluorine into a stable mineral that can be easily disposed of.

Even with all its risks, Hamilton said, “there are still going to be areas where we need it — complex industrial chemistries that rely on it, or certain protective gear where we need oil and water resistance.”

The spread of PFAS didn’t happen overnight, and their replacement won’t either, she said. “It took several decades of R&D work” for the current thousands of PFAS compounds to come to market,” she said. “We have to give time to the replacements to go through the same journey.”

Read the full story here.
Photos courtesy of

Forever Chemicals' Might Triple Teens' Risk Of Fatty Liver Disease

By Dennis Thompson HealthDay ReporterTHURSDAY, Jan. 8, 2026 (HealthDay News) — PFAS “forever chemicals” might nearly triple a young person’s risk...

By Dennis Thompson HealthDay ReporterTHURSDAY, Jan. 8, 2026 (HealthDay News) — PFAS “forever chemicals” might nearly triple a young person’s risk of developing fatty liver disease, a new study says.Each doubling in blood levels of the PFAS chemical perfluorooctanoic acid is linked to 2.7 times the odds of fatty liver disease among teenagers, according to findings published in the January issue of the journal Environmental Research.Fatty liver disease — also known as metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) — occurs when fat builds up in the organ, leading to inflammation, scarring and increased risk of cancer.About 10% of all children, and up to 40% of children with obesity, have fatty liver disease, researchers said in background notes.“MASLD can progress silently for years before causing serious health problems,” said senior researcher Dr. Lida Chatzi, a professor of population and public health sciences and pediatrics at the Keck School of Medicine of USC in Los Angeles.“When liver fat starts accumulating in adolescence, it may set the stage for a lifetime of metabolic and liver health challenges,” Chatzi added in a news release. “If we reduce PFAS exposure early, we may help prevent liver disease later. That’s a powerful public health opportunity.”Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are called “forever chemicals” because they combine carbon and fluorine molecules, one of the strongest chemical bonds possible. This makes PFAS removal and breakdown very difficult.PFAS compounds have been used in consumer products since the 1940s, including fire extinguishing foam, nonstick cookware, food wrappers, stain-resistant furniture and waterproof clothing.More than 99% of Americans have measurable PFAS in their blood, and at least one PFAS chemical is present in roughly half of U.S. drinking water supplies, researchers said.“Adolescents are particularly more vulnerable to the health effects of PFAS as it is a critical period of development and growth,” lead researcher Shiwen “Sherlock” Li, an assistant professor of public health sciences at the University of Hawaii, said in a news release.“In addition to liver disease, PFAS exposure has been associated with a range of adverse health outcomes, including several types of cancer,” Li said.For the new study, researchers examined data on 284 Southern California adolescents and young adults gathered as part of two prior USC studies.All of the participants already had a high risk of metabolic disease because their parents had type 2 diabetes or were overweight, researchers said.Their PFAS levels were measured through blood tests, and liver fat was assessed using MRI scans.Higher blood levels of two common PFAS — perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluoroheptanoic acid (PFHpA) — were linked to an increased risk of fatty liver disease.Results showed a young person’s risk was even higher if they smoked or carried a genetic variant known to influence liver fat.“These findings suggest that PFAS exposures, genetics and lifestyle factors work together to influence who has greater risk of developing MASLD as a function of your life stage,” researcher Max Aung, assistant professor of population and public health sciences at the Keck School of Medicine, said in a news release.“Understanding gene and environment interactions can help advance precision environmental health for MASLD,” he added.The study also showed that fatty liver disease became more common as teens grew older, adding to evidence that younger people might be more vulnerable to PFAS exposure, Chatzi said.“PFAS exposures not only disrupt liver biology but also translate into real liver disease risk in youth,” Chatzi said. “Adolescence seems to be a critical window of susceptibility, suggesting PFAS exposure may matter most when the liver is still developing.”The Environmental Working Group has more on PFAS.SOURCES: Keck School of Medicine of USC, news release, Jan. 6, 2026; Environmental Research, Jan. 1, 2026Copyright © 2026 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

China Announces Another New Trade Measure Against Japan as Tensions Rise

China has escalated its trade tensions with Japan by launching an investigation into imported dichlorosilane, a chemical gas used in making semiconductors

BEIJING (AP) — China escalated its trade tensions with Japan on Wednesday by launching an investigation into imported dichlorosilane, a chemical gas used in making semiconductors, a day after it imposed curbs on the export of so-called dual-use goods that could be used by Japan’s military.The Chinese Commerce Ministry said in a statement that it had launched the investigation following an application from the domestic industry showing the price of dichlorosilane imported from Japan had decreased 31% between 2022 and 2024.“The dumping of imported products from Japan has damaged the production and operation of our domestic industry,” the ministry said.The measure comes a day after Beijing banned exports to Japan of dual-use goods that can have military applications.Beijing has been showing mounting displeasure with Tokyo after new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested late last year that her nation's military could intervene if China were to take action against Taiwan — an island democracy that Beijing considers its own territory.Tensions were stoked again on Tuesday when Japanese lawmaker Hei Seki, who last year was sanctioned by China for “spreading fallacies” about Taiwan and other disputed territories, visited Taiwan and called it an independent country. Also known as Yo Kitano, he has been banned from entering China. He told reporters that his arrival in Taiwan demonstrated the two are “different countries.”“I came to Taiwan … to prove this point, and to tell the world that Taiwan is an independent country,” Hei Seki said, according to Taiwan’s Central News Agency.“The nasty words of a petty villain like him are not worth commenting on,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning retorted when asked about his comment. Fears of a rare earths curb Masaaki Kanai, head of Asia Oceanian Affairs at Japan's Foreign Ministry, urged China to scrap the trade curbs, saying a measure exclusively targeting Japan that deviates from international practice is unacceptable. Japan, however, has yet to announce any retaliatory measures.As the two countries feuded, speculation rose that China might target rare earths exports to Japan, in a move similar to the rounds of critical minerals export restrictions it has imposed as part of its trade war with the United States.China controls most of the global production of heavy rare earths, used for making powerful, heat-resistance magnets used in industries such as defense and electric vehicles.While the Commerce Ministry did not mention any new rare earths curbs, the official newspaper China Daily, seen as a government mouthpiece, quoted anonymous sources saying Beijing was considering tightening exports of certain rare earths to Japan. That report could not be independently confirmed. Improved South Korean ties contrast with Japan row As Beijing spars with Tokyo, it has made a point of courting a different East Asian power — South Korea.On Wednesday, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung wrapped up a four-day trip to China – his first since taking office in June. Lee and Chinese President Xi Jinping oversaw the signing of cooperation agreements in areas such as technology, trade, transportation and environmental protection.As if to illustrate a contrast with the China-Japan trade frictions, Lee joined two business events at which major South Korean and Chinese companies pledged to collaborate.The two sides signed 24 export contracts worth a combined $44 million, according to South Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry and Resources. During Lee’s visit, Chinese media also reported that South Korea overtook Japan as the leading destination for outbound flights from China’s mainland over the New Year’s holiday.China has been discouraging travel to Japan, saying Japanese leaders’ comments on Taiwan have created “significant risks to the personal safety and lives of Chinese citizens in Japan.”Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Photos You Should See – December 2025

Pesticide industry ‘immunity shield’ stripped from US appropriations bill

Democrats and the Make America Healthy Again movement pushed back on the rider in a funding bill led by BayerIn a setback for the pesticide industry, Democrats have succeeded in removing a rider from a congressional appropriations bill that would have helped protect pesticide makers from being sued and could have hindered state efforts to warn about pesticide risks.Chellie Pingree, a Democratic representative from Maine and ranking member of the House appropriations interior, environment, and related agencies subcommittee, said Monday that the controversial measure pushed by the agrochemical giant Bayer and industry allies has been stripped from the 2026 funding bill. Continue reading...

In a setback for the pesticide industry, Democrats have succeeded in removing a rider from a congressional appropriations bill that would have helped protect pesticide makers from being sued and could have hindered state efforts to warn about pesticide risks.Chellie Pingree, a Democratic representative from Maine and ranking member of the House appropriations interior, environment, and related agencies subcommittee, said Monday that the controversial measure pushed by the agrochemical giant Bayer and industry allies has been stripped from the 2026 funding bill.The move is final, as Senate Republican leaders have agreed not to revisit the issue, Pingree said.“I just drew a line in the sand and said this cannot stay in the bill,” Pingree told the Guardian. “There has been intensive lobbying by Bayer. This has been quite a hard fight.”The now-deleted language was part of a larger legislative effort that critics say is aimed at limiting litigation against pesticide industry leader Bayer, which sells the widely used Roundup herbicides.An industry alliance set up by Bayer has been pushing for both state and federal laws that would make it harder for consumers to sue over pesticide risks to human health and has successfully lobbied for the passing of such laws in Georgia and North Dakota so far.The specific proposed language added to the appropriations bill blocked federal funds from being used to “issue or adopt any guidance or any policy, take any regulatory action, or approve any labeling or change to such labeling” inconsistent with the conclusion of an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) human health assessment.Critics said the language would have impeded states and local governments from warning about risks of pesticides even in the face of new scientific findings about health harms if such warnings were not consistent with outdated EPA assessments. The EPA itself would not be able to update warnings without finalizing a new assessment, the critics said.And because of the limits on warnings, critics of the rider said, consumers would have found it difficult, if not impossible, to sue pesticide makers for failing to warn them of health risks if the EPA assessments do not support such warnings.“This provision would have handed pesticide manufacturers exactly what they’ve been lobbying for: federal preemption that stops state and local governments from restricting the use of harmful, cancer-causing chemicals, adding health warnings, or holding companies accountable in court when people are harmed,” Pingree said in a statement. “It would have meant that only the federal government gets a say – even though we know federal reviews can take years, and are often subject to intense industry pressure.”Pingree tried but failed to overturn the language in a July appropriations committee hearing.Bayer, the key backer of the legislative efforts, has been struggling for years to put an end to thousands of lawsuits filed by people who allege they developed cancer from their use of Roundup and other glyphosate-based weed killers sold by Bayer. The company inherited the litigation when it bought Monsanto in 2018 and has paid out billions of dollars in settlements and jury verdicts but still faces several thousand ongoing lawsuits. Bayer maintains its glyphosate-based herbicides do not cause cancer and are safe when used as directed.When asked for comment on Monday, Bayer said that no company should have “blanket immunity” and it disputed that the appropriations bill language would have prevented anyone from suing pesticide manufacturers. The company said it supports state and federal legislation “because the future of American farming depends on reliable science-based regulation of important crop protection products – determined safe for use by the EPA”.The company additionally states on its website that without “legislative certainty”, lawsuits over its glyphosate-based Roundup and other weed killers can impact its research and product development and other “important investments”.Pingree said her efforts were aided by members of the Make America Healthy Again (Maha) movement who have spent the last few months meeting with congressional members and their staffers on this issue. She said her team reached out to Maha leadership in the last few days to pressure Republican lawmakers.“This is the first time that we’ve had a fairly significant advocacy group working on the Republican side,” she said.Last week, Zen Honeycutt, a Maha leader and founder of the group Moms Across America, posted a “call to action”, urging members to demand elected officials “Stop the Pesticide Immunity Shield”.“A lot of people helped make this happen,” Honeycutt said. “Many health advocates have been fervently expressing their requests to keep chemical companies accountable for safety … We are delighted that our elected officials listened to so many Americans who spoke up and are restoring trust in the American political system.”Pingree said the issue is not dead. Bayer has “made this a high priority”, and she expects to see continued efforts to get industry friendly language inserted into legislation, including into the new Farm Bill.“I don’t think this is over,” she said.This story is co-published with the New Lede, a journalism project of the Environmental Working Group

Forever Chemicals' Common in Cosmetics, but FDA Says Safety Data Are Scant

By Deanna Neff HealthDay ReporterSATURDAY, Jan. 3, 2026 (HealthDay News) — Federal regulators have released a mandated report regarding the...

By Deanna Neff HealthDay ReporterSATURDAY, Jan. 3, 2026 (HealthDay News) — Federal regulators have released a mandated report regarding the presence of "forever chemicals" in makeup and skincare products. Forever chemicals — known as perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS — are manmade chemicals that don't break down and have built up in people’s bodies and the environment. They are sometimes added to beauty products intentionally, and sometimes they are contaminants. While the findings confirm that PFAS are widely used in the beauty industry, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) admitted it lacks enough scientific evidence to determine if they are truly safe for consumers.The new report reveals that 51 forever chemicals — are used in 1,744 cosmetic formulations. These synthetic chemicals are favored by manufacturers because they make products waterproof, increase their durability and improve texture.FDA scientists focused their review on the 25 most frequently used PFAS, which account for roughly 96% of these chemicals found in beauty products. The results were largely unclear. While five were deemed to have low safety concerns, one was flagged for potential health risks, and safety of the rest could not be confirmed.FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary expressed concern over the difficulty in accessing private research. “Our scientists found that toxicological data for most PFAS are incomplete or unavailable, leaving significant uncertainty about consumer safety,” Makary said in a news release, adding that “this lack of reliable data demands further research.”Despite growing concerns about their potential toxicity, no federal laws specifically ban their use in cosmetics.The FDA report focuses on chemicals that are added to products on purpose, rather than those that might show up as accidental contaminants. Moving forward, FDA plans to work closely with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to update and strengthen recommendations on PFAS across the retail and food supply chain, Makary said. The agency has vowed to devote more resources to monitoring these chemicals and will take enforcement action if specific products are proven to be dangerous.The U.S. Food and Drug Administration provides updates and consumer guidance on the use of PFAS in cosmetics.SOURCE: U.S. Food and Drug Administration, news release, Dec. 29, 2025Copyright © 2026 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

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