Rocket Fuel in Drinking Water:
Perchlorate Pollution Spreading Nationwide
Drinking water for more than 20 million Americans is contaminated with a
toxic legacy of the Cold War: A chemical that interferes with normal thyroid
function, may cause cancer and persists indefinitely in the environment, but is
currently unregulated by state or federal authorities.
Perchlorate, the explosive main ingredient of rocket and missile fuel,
contaminates drinking water supplies, groundwater or soil in hundreds of
locations in at least 43 states, according to Environmental Working Groups
updated analysis of government data. EWGs analysis of the latest scientific
studies, which show harmful health effects from minute doses, argues that a
national standard for perchlorate in drinking water should be no higher than
one-tenth the level the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency currrently
recommends as safe.
Perchlorate is a powerful thyroid toxin that can affect the thyroids ability
to take up the essential nutrient iodide and make thyroid hormones. Small
disruptions in thyroid hormone levels during pregnancy can cause lowered IQ and
larger disruptions cause mental retardation, loss of hearing and speech, or
deficits in motor skills for infants and children.
In California, Arizona and Nevada, where testing has been most extensive,
well over 20 million people drink water from public and private sources known to
be polluted with perchlorate. This estimate includes millions of customers of 81
contaminated public water systems in California and aproximately 20 million
customers in the three states who get at least part of their drinking water from
the perchlorate-tainted Colorado River. (Because there is some overlap between
systems that are supplied by groundwater sources and those supplied by the
Colorado River, a total cannot be calculated by adding the two figures.)
On March 3, 2003, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-CA, introduced legislation that would
mandate that the federal government set a drinking water standard for
perchlorate by July 1, 2004. California health officials are working toward
setting a state drinking water standard sometime in 2004, but the EPA is not
expected to set enforceable national standards before 2008, if then.
Californias current provisional drinking water standard, which is only
advisory, is 2 to 6 parts per billion (ppb). The EPAs current draft standard is
equiavlent to 1 ppb. Boxers legislation does not specify what the standard
should be but mandates that it be set at a level that will protect the most
sensitive populations. EWGs analysis of new studies, showing harmful effects
from very low doses, argues that to protect children the standard should be no
higher than one-tenth the EPAs recommendation, or 0.1 ppb.
Perchlorate contamination of soil or of groundwater sources, not all
of which are used for drinking water, has been found at more than 50 sites
in 17 states.
Perchlorate is known to have been made, used or stored at more than
150 sites in 36 states. At some of these locations, water or soil
contamination has already been detected by testing, but the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency says it is certain that further tests
would confirm contamination at all of the sites.
Perchlorate testing is urgently needed on at least 63 military sites
in 32 states where rockets, missiles or munitions have been developed,
produced, tested, stored, maintained, or disposed of. To date, testing is
planned at only a few of these sites.
Perchlorate is used in fireworks, safety flares, matches and car air bags,
but 90 percent of it goes into solid rocket fuel for military missiles and the
NASA space shuttle. American Pacific Corp. of Las Vegas and Kerr-McGee Corp. of
Oklahoma City were the sole U.S. producers until 1998, when American Pacific
bought out its rival.
National data is still spotty, but extensive drinking water testing is now
taking place under the federal Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule, which
requires testing by all large water systems and some smaller ones. As the data
comes in, perchlorate contamination is being found in many places where there
was no record of the chemicals use.
Once thought to affect only Air Force facilities and contractors, more
recently perchlorate contamination has been found in tests at many Army and Navy
sites as well, especially where munitions have been disposed of by open burning
or detonation. Among known contaminated sites is the McGregor Naval Weapons
Plant in central Texas, just a few miles from President Bushs ranch.
Underground plumes of perchlorate have also been found spreading from
non-military industrial sites, such as an abandoned flare factory in San Martin,
Calif., formerly operated by Olin Corp. of Norwalk, Conn., that has polluted
more than 100 private wells.
Although the majority of known and suspected perchlorate-contaminated sites
are operated by the military or contractors such as St. Louis-based Lockheed
Martin, the Department of Defense and the aerospace and defense industry are
stubbornly resisting the efforts of regulators to set adequate safety standards
or clean up contaminated sites.
Despite volumes of new evidence showing that very low doses are harmful to
fetuses, infants and children, the Pentagon and its contractors argue that the
risks of perchlorate should be assessed on the basis of a single study, funded
by the defense industry, on short-term exposure of a handful of adult men and
non-pregnant women. Last year, Kerr-McGee and Lockheed Martin successfully sued
California health authorities to reconsider the states provisional drinking
water standard, which likely will force the state to miss a January 2004
deadline, mandated by state law, for setting an enforceable standard.
Both the Defense Department and Lockheed Martin, which is being sued by 800
residents of San Bernardino, Calif., for cancer and other illnesses they believe
were caused by decades of drinking perchlorate-contaminated water, maintain that
perchlorate is safe at levels 200 times higher than the EPAs current
recommendation. In fact, there is strong evidence that the EPAs recommended
level of 1 ppb is far too high.
Neither the EPA nor the state of California have taken into account the
numerous common anti-thyroid chemicals which may worsen the effects of
perchlorate, notably the drinking water contaminant nitrate. Neither the EPA nor
California have taken note of epidemiological studies that found effects on
infant thyroid hormone levels at 1 to 6 ppb.
And neither the EPA nor California have adequately considered the extra
perchlorate that may be consumed by eating lettuce or other produce grown with
contaminated water. Documents obtained and published by EWG in December 2002
showed that a 1997 study in San Bernardino, Calif., of leafy vegetables growing
in perchlorate-contaminated water found that the crops took up and stored
perchlorate and concentrated it by an average factor of 65. This high rate of
bioaccumulation means that a pregnant woman who ate a two-ounce serving of the
vegetables would get a dose of perchlorate more than 100 times higher than what
the EPA recommends as safe in a liter of drinking water.
Copyright 2003, Environmental Working
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