Read the full article by Yereth Rosen (Alaska Beacon)
“Around the far north, including in Alaska, levels of certain contaminants found in people’s bodies have declined over the past three decades, likely showing the positive effect of regulation, according to a newly released study from an Arctic Council research group.
The blood and breast milk of people in various Arctic regions shows declining levels of regulated pollutants and growing levels of unregulated ones.
Within the blood and breast milk of people in various Arctic regions, levels of a class of chemicals used in electrical equipment and industrial lubricants, and certain pesticides fell steadily from about 1990 to the early 2020s, said the report from the council’s Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme, or AMAP.
However, in several areas, blood and breast milk showed increasing levels over time of unregulated per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which are known as PFAS, the study showed.” …
