Robert Besser
07 Jun 2023, 15:31 GMT+10
TRAVERSE CITY, Michigan: DuPont, Chemours and Corteva have reached an agreement to pay $1.18 billion to resolve complaints of causing pollution in many US drinking water systems, through the use of compounds known as PFAS.
The three companies said they will compensate water providers for contamination with the "forever chemicals" used widely in nonstick, water- and grease-resistant products, as well as some firefighting foams, through a fund they will establish.
PFAS, which do not degrade naturally in the environment, have been linked to liver and immune-system damage, some cancers and other health issues.
They have been detected in drinking water around the US at varying levels.
The agreement would settle a case scheduled for trial this week involving a water pollution claim by Stuart, Florida.
The city is one of about 300 communities throughout the United States that have filed equivalent suits since 2018 against companies that produced firefighting foam or the PFAS contained in the foam. The cases are pending in US District Court in Charleston, South Carolina.
Among the plaintiffs are water providers, airports, and a number of states and private well owners.
In a statement, law firms representing plaintiffs said, "This agreement represents the first of many steps to begin to redress the harms of PFAS contamination in America's drinking water supplies."
The settlement will "comprehensively resolve all PFAS-related drinking water claims of a defined class of public water systems that serve the vast majority of the US population," the companies said in a joint statement.
The agreement excludes systems owned by states or the US government and small systems that have not detected PFAS and are not legally required to monitor for its presence.
Get a daily dose of Russia Herald news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Russia Herald.
More InformationISLAMABAD, Pakistan - According to The News, the federal government is considering selling its stake in the Reko Diq project ...
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - U.S. stocks tumbled on Tuesday as interest rates on 10 and 30-year Treasury yields approached ...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The chief medical officer has issued a stark warning regarding the alarming levels of cannabis consumption in Ireland, ...
OAKLAND, California: As their current contract expires and their unions prepare to strike, Kaiser Permanente workers' representatives said, on September ...
FRANKFURT, Germany: Inflation in the eurozone hit a two-year low in September, signaling that the European Central Bank's (ECB) strategy ...
BEIJING, China: Official statistics released on the weekend showed that in September, Chinese factory activity expanded for the first time ...
STOCKHOLM, Sweden: Swedish lithium-ion battery producer Northvolt announced this week that it would build a $5.2 billion gigafactory in the ...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - According to a high-ranking government official who briefed a parliamentary panel on Wednesday, although Pakistan has accelerated ...
SEOUL, South Korea: Marking a tougher stand against North Korea, South Korea held its first large-scale military parade in over ...
Geneva [Switzerland], October 4 (ANI): During the ongoing Human Rights Council session in Geneva at the iconic UN HQ, Palais ...
New Delhi [India], October 4 (ANI): The ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 is less than a week away from now ...
Rawalpindi [Pakistan], October 4 (ANI): At least 10 terrorists were killed in a gun battle with the security forces in ...