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Maine’s emerging chemical threat is in heat pumps and other appliances

Photo credit: Caitlin Penna / Colby College - Tracey Cote (left), head Nordic ski coach at Colby College in Waterville, and Gail Carlson, assistant professor of environmental studies at the college, test the snow for PFAS forever chemicals at Quarry Road Trails in Waterville in this January 2021 photo.

Read the full article by Lori Valigra (Bangor Daily News)

“An environmental threat is emerging in Maine and throughout the world from the refrigeration chemicals that replaced ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons after they were banned in 1987.

The toxic compound, trifluoroacetic acid, or TFA, is a byproduct of the chemicals now widely used in aerosol products and to cool refrigerators, air conditioners and heat pumps. It is produced when those chemicals, known as hydrofluorocarbons, degrade. TFA is widespread and has been increasingly found in drinking water and rain worldwide in recent decades, causing environmental experts to worry about possible undetected health risks.

So far, Maine and the federal government are not regulating or testing for TFA, which is considered by many to be a forever chemical. Scientists are concerned that the chemical, which is difficult to both test for and get rid of because its molecular structure is small, is increasing rapidly in the global environment since the ban of chlorofluorocarbons nearly four decades ago.”…

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