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HIGH LEVELS OF TOXIC FIRE RETARDANTS FOUND IN HOUSE DUST
FEDERAL PHASEOUT WILL LEAVE AMERICANS AT RISK OF EXPOSURE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE — May 12, 2004
OAKLAND, CA — The phaseout of two widely used chemicals will not protect
Americans from exposure to brominated fire retardants linked to brain and
nerve damage, according to nationwide tests of house dust that found
unexpectedly high levels of a third retardant that will remain on the
market.
In the first national tests for PBDEs (polybrominated
diphenyl ethers) in household dust, the Environmental
Working Group (EWG) found high levels of
the neurotoxic compounds in every home sampled, including
one in Ann Arbor. Mich. The average level of PBDEs in
dust from nine homes was more than
4,600 parts per billion (ppb), well above the average in
any previous U.S. dust study. A tenth sample, collected
in a home where products with fire
retardants were recently removed, had more than 41,000
ppb of PBDEs - twice as high as any other dust study
worldwide.
[The study is embargoed for release at 12:01 a.m. EDT on Wednesday, May 12.
To preview it contact EWG. Interviews are available with study participants
in California, Michigan, Montana, Washington state and Washington, D.C.]
EWG's tests indicate that consumer products such as computers, TVs,
furniture, carpets and drapes, not industrial releases, are the most likely
sources of the rapid buildup of PBDEs in people, animals and the
environment. Our findings raise concerns that children may ingest harmful
amounts of brominated fire retardants via dust, and indicate neither the
pending federal phaseout or proposed Michigan legislation go far enough.
Under an agreement between the Environmental Protection Agency and chemical
manufacturers, two of the three main PBDEs in use, Penta and Octa, will be
taken off the U.S. market at the end of 2004. The fire retardants industry
is fighting to retain use of the third and most heavily used compound, Deca
- despite clear evidence that it is toxic, builds up in people, animals and
the environment, and can break down to the more harmful forms being phased
out.
In half of the homes EWG sampled, the predominant PBDE present was the type
found only in Deca. We also found important new evidence of PBDEs' chemical
breakdown, underscoring the fact that current federal and state efforts to
get rid of harmful PBDEs are in vain if they don't include Deca.
California was the first state to take action on PBDEs, with a law banning
Penta and Octa beginning in 2008. Six other states have passed or are
considering bans or regulation of PBDEs, but only New York's proposed law
and Washington's regulatory phaseout address Deca.
"It is no longer possible to ignore the evidence that Deca poses a threat to
health and the environment," said EWG analyst Renee Sharp, principal author
of the new study. "The EPA can't leave it to the states to regulate Deca on
a patchwork basis. The evidence demands prompt action."
In September 2003, nationwide tests by EWG found record levels of PBDEs in
the breast milk of American mothers. This follow-up study of household dust
includes 10 of the 20 participants from the breast milk study, and is the
first study to compare the concentrations of fire retardants in people and
in their homes.
It is no surprise that American homes are full of PBDEs, which are added to
thousands of consumer products. But our tests show the surprising degree to
which these chemicals are escaping from consumer products. The PBDE
concentrations we measured in house dust are much higher than levels
previously reported in people, animals or the environment, and also pose a
more direct risk of exposure to people, especially children, who continually
ingest or inhale dust.
Contacts:
Bill Walker, Renee Sharp or Sonya Lunder
EWG, (510) 444-0973
Dave Dempsey or Tracy Easthope
Ann Arbor Ecology Center, (734) 761-3186