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A new class of toxic chemicals has been
discovered in breast milk, in human blood, in food, in remote
rural air, in wild fish, and in the sewage sludge being
applied as fertilizer on food crops across the U.S.
A
Canadian health official recently summed up the discovery
saying, "This stuff is everywhere."[1]
The newly-discovered contaminants are
brominated flame retardants. Bromine is a highly-reactive
chemical element, a halogen in the same class as chlorine and
iodine.
Worldwide, eight chemical corporations
manufacture about 300 million pounds of brominated fire
retardants each year, of which about 80 million pounds are
members of the class known as polybromo diphenyl ethers, or
PBDEs.[2]
Although all brominated fire retardants seem
capable of creating environment and health problems, here we
will focus on PBDEs, which leach into the environment from the
plastics in appliances, TVs and computers, foam in upholstery,
and the fabrics of carpets and draperies. Many hard styrene
plastics and many foam padding materials are 5% to 30% PBDE by
weight.
Like their cousin PCBs (polychlorinated
biphenyls), many PBDEs persist for years in the environment,
accumulate in the food chain and concentrate in fatty tissues.
A recent survey of the PBDE literature revealed that some
PBDEs can cause cancer,
interfere with hormones, and disrupt normal growth and
development in laboratory animals.[3]
Recent studies have shown that these brominated
compounds can interfere with the thyroid hormone, which is
critical for the proper development of the brain and central
nervous system in animals and humans. Baby mice exposed to
PBDEs show permanent behavioral and memory problems, which
worsen with age.[3,4]
Because PBDEs are found at very
high levels in computers, carpets and the foam padding inside
furniture, the thick dust covering "ground zero" in lower
Manhattan doubtless contains substantial quantities of PBDEs,
so anyone breathing the air there without proper safety
equipment is inhaling these toxicants.
The dust at the
site of the World Trade Center atrocities resulted from
"thousands of plastic computers, acres of flammable carpet,
[and] tons of office furniture...." pulverized when the twin
towers and other nearby buildings collapsed September 11.
To make matters worse, a portion of this high-tech
dust is being continuously incinerated by a stubborn fire
smoldering beneath the rubble.[5]
In several "risk
assessments" of air pollution hazards at "ground zero" US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has concluded that the
air in lower Manhattan is safe for workers and residents,[6]
but EPA's risk assessment did not consider PBDEs (nor did it
consider many other chemicals probably present in that air).
Notably, in spite of EPA's assurances of safety, more
than 4000 people have developed chronic chest pain, a
persistent cough now known as "world trade center cough" and
asthma-like (or emphysema-like) breathing problems from
exposure to the air in lower Manhattan.[7]
EPA has also
employed risk assessment to declare the use of contaminated
sewage sludge "safe" as fertilizer on food crops, but here
again EPA did not consider the effects of PBDEs (or many other
chemicals) on the crops, on people eating the crops, or on the
natural environment in which the crops are grown.
An
estimated 8 billion pounds of contaminated sewage sludge are
routinely spread onto farmland in the US each year. In July of
this year researchers reported finding high concentrations of
PBDEs in 11 samples of sewage sludge from Virginia, New York
and California.[8]
This of course is one of the
unavoidable failings of a risk-assessment approach to managing
toxic chemicals -- you can only (partially) assess the risks
of chemicals that you know a great deal about. US chemical
manufacturers introduce about 1000 new chemicals into
commercial use each year with no safety testing required and
little or none done.
Typically, safety testing only
begins after industrial chemicals have been discovered causing
harm 10 to 20 years after introduction. Risk assessments are
always "behind the curve" and therefore always give false
assurances of safety.
An alternative to the risk
assessment approach is to take precautionary action as soon as
evidence of harm begins to emerge.
A recent survey by a
group of Scandinavian researchers reports that PBDE levels
have been increasing exponentially in the environment in
Sweden for 30 years and show no sign of leveling off.[2]
Recent studies indicate that the US is far more contaminated
than Sweden.
For example, sewage sludge in the US
contains 10 to 100 times as much PBDE as does European
sludge.[8] Other major sources of PBDEs are thought to be
municipal incinerators and landfills.[2] PBDEs can also
volatilize (ooze into the air) out of electrical components,
especially from warm devices such as computers and TV
sets.
PBDEs are not very soluble in water, but they
dissolve readily in fat. They are also persistent in the
environment (meaning they break down only slowly). As they
move through the food chain, they concentrate and biomagnify.
These are the very characteristics that have caused other
industrial poisons to be labeled bad actors and yanked from
the market, including DDT and PCBs.
Given these
characteristics, it was no surprise when Scandinavian
scientists reported earlier this year that PBDEs have been increasing exponentially
in breast milk in Sweden since 1972, the
concentration doubling every 5 years.[2]
The
researchers emphasized that current levels in breast milk, and
in the Swedish diet, are far below the levels known to harm
laboratory animals, but they concluded that "the time trend of
PBDEs in human breast milk is alarming for the future."
No one
knows for sure what the effects of PBDEs might be on
developing embryos or suckling infants. It is worth
emphasizing here that breast milk, even laced as it is with
low levels of industrial poisons, is still the best food for
infants because all the alternatives are worse.
PBDEs
are now everywhere. European researchers have found PBDEs in
freshwater and ocean fish (salmon, herring, sprat), in air at
remote rural locations, in sewage sludge, in deep ocean
sediments, in eels, seals, shellfish, bottlenose dolphins,
porpoises, pilot whales, and crabs, among other species. Based
on limited studies, the Great Lakes appear to be among the
most PBDE-contaminated bodies of water in the world, with Lake
Michigan the worst.[2]
Studies in Germany, Holland,
Sweden, Japan and the US have reported the presence of PBDEs
in fish, meat, cow's milk, fats/- oils, and bakery products.
Studies of human blood in the US have revealed PBDEs in all
samples.
In 1999 the Swedish Chemicals Inspectorate
concluded that, "The lower-brominated technical PBDE
compounds, containing mostly pentaBDE, are persistent,
bioaccumulative and toxic in the aquatic environment.
They show effects above all on the liver but also on
thyroid hormone and affect the behaviour of mice. They occur
widely in the environment, in human blood and in mother's
milk."[10] In Sweden, this combination of characteristics
triggers precautionary action to remove such chemicals from
the market. Denmark and the Netherlands have also taken steps
to ban PBDEs.[2,11]
In September the European Union
decided to take precautionary action without waiting for
conclusive scientific evidence of harm. The European
Parliament voted September 6 to
ban the use, manufacture, and import of some forms of PBDEs
during the next few years, but the European Council
of Ministers must approve the ban before it becomes
law.
Naturally, all such bans will be subject to
challenge in the secret tribunals of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) if any of the world's eight manufacturers
of PBDEs decides to fight for its self-declared "right" to
turn a profit by discharging industrial poisons into the
environment.
The manufacturers have reportedly
expressed "furious opposition" to the European ban.[11] One of
the main purposes in setting up the WTO was to allow
corporations (acting through pliant governments) to use "risk
assessment"to challenge and repeal the health and safety
regulations of any and all nations.
Prior to the WTO,
corporations had no way to challenge the health and safety
policies of all nations simultaneously, so the WTO offers
remarkable new efficiencies in this regard. Risk assessment is
ideally suited for such a purpose, especially when little is
known about the chemicals being assessed. The less is known,
the safer the chemicals can be made to appear -- just as with
the air at ground zero.
The US government has no
regulations governing the manufacture, use, or disposal of
PBDEs, and has announced no plans to initiate regulations. US
chemical policy is still in a primitive state, guided by the
philosophy, "Don't ask, don't tell."
PBDEs are similar
in chemical form, and in many of their actions, to PCBs
(polychlorinated biphenyls), which are among the most
dangerous and persistent chemicals ever let loose by corporate
imprudence.
The US banned PCBs in 1976, when much less
was known about PCBs than is known about PBDEs today. But our
political situation is far different today than it was in
1976. Corporations today are much more powerful and
governments are substantially weaker.
Corporations
have succeeded in embedding risk assessment into all US
government decision-making processes, so precautionary action
is nearly inconceivable within most agencies of government.
The public is much better informed, but its democratic
institutions (public schools, the press, the judiciary,
Congress and the executive branch) have been hijacked by
corporate money and now mainly serve powerful elites,
regardless of the general welfare.
Within 10 to 15
years PBDEs will have surpassed PCBs as environmental hazards.
Breast milk studies indicate
that the danger to infants and children is rapidly
rising. Who will lead this fight to allow us to
take precautionary action against the corporate
poisoners?
Environmental Research
Foundation
DR. MERCOLA'S
COMMENT:
Yet another
chemical that we need to be aware of. Yet, as the article
states, even though breast milk may have it present, it is
still far better for an infant to receive contaminated breast
milk than any commercial formula.
Related
Articles:
Why The Precautionary Principle? A Meditation on
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) and the Breasts of
Mothers
The
Mystery in Your Milk
[1] Charlotte Shubert, "Burned by
Flame Rretardants?" SCIENCE NEWS Vol. 160 (October 13, 2001),
pgs. 238-239.
[2] Per Ola Darnerud and others,
"Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers: Occurrence, Dietary Exposure,
and Toxicology," ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES Vol. 109
Supplement 1 (March 2001), pgs. 49-68.
[3] Kim Hooper
and Thomas A. McDonald, "The PBDEs: An Emerging Environmental
Challenge and Another Reason for Breast-Milk Monitoring
Programs," ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES Vol. 108, No. 5
(May 2000), pgs. 387-392.
[4] Per Eriksson and others,
"Brominated Flame Retardants: A Novel Class of Developmental
Neurotoxicants in Our Environment?" ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
PERSPECTIVES Vol. 109, No. 9 (September 2001), pgs.
903-908.
[5] Eric Lipton and Andrew C. Revkin, "With
Water and Sweat, Fighting the Most Stubborn Fire," NEW YORK
TIMES November 19, 2001, page unknown. Available at
http://www.nytimes.com.
[6] Diane Cardwell, "A Nation
Challenged: Lower Manhattan; Workers and Residents Are Safe,
Officials Say," NEW YORK TIMES Nov. 2, 2001, pg. unknown.
Available at www.nytimes.com.
[7] Robert Worth, "A
Nation Challenged: The Site; Citing Safety, City Will Cut Work
Force For Recovery," NEW YORK TIMES November 1, 2001, pg.
unknown. Available at www.nytimes.com.
[8] Robert C.
Hale and others, "Persistent pollutants in land-applied
sludges," NATURE Vol. 412 (July 12, 2001), pgs.
140-141.
[9] Sandra Steingraber, HAVING FAITH
(Cambridge, Mass.: Perseus Publishing, 2001). ISBN
0-7382-0467-6.
[10] KemI, "KemI proposes a prohibition
of flame retardants," March 15, 1999. See
http://www.-kemi.se/aktuellt/pressmedd/1999/-
990312_eng.htm
[11] Environment News Service, "EU
Lawmakers Vote Broad Fire Retardant Ban," September 6, 2001.
See http://www.ens-news.com/ens/- sep2001/2001L-09-06-02.html.
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