Site icon The PFAS Project Lab

Inside Sea-Tac’s efforts to clean up PFAS firefighting foams

Photo credit: Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times - At Port of Seattle Fire Department Station 1, a firetruck containing 600 gallons of firefighting foam containing PFAS sprays plain water from a separate tank during maintenance last week at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. This truck will soon be cleaned of PFAS, using an environmentally friendly solution, and only then will deploy a new type of foam without PFAS.

Read the full article by Isabella Breda and Manuel Villa (The Seattle Times)

“SEATTLE-TACOMA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT — Taxiing jet engines groaned on the tarmac, their fumes filling the Port of Seattle’s firetruck bays on an early summer day here. Snaking hoses connected tanks and filters in a complex cleanup operation.

Over six days, the system flushed a toxic substance from a firetruck as the department became one of the first in the nation to begin to remove firefighting foam concentrates laced with ‘forever chemicals.’

For decades, per- and polyfluoroalkyl chemicals, or PFAS, have been used in foams to put out the highest-intensity petroleum-fueled fires — especially important in saving lives amid catastrophe at airports, military bases and fossil fuel refineries.

But the chemicals have left a deadly legacy.”…

Exit mobile version