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Phillies clinch first MLB division by beating Dodgers
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Rubio asks Qatar to stay as mediator after Israeli strike
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Trump set for unprecedented second UK state visit
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Lower US tariffs on Japan autos kick in
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Papua New Guinea, Australia to vow mutual defence in new treaty
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Malawi election a battle of two presidents
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Asian markets rise as traders prepare for expected US rate cut
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Malawi votes in a rematch between two presidents as economic crisis bites
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Australia says social media ban will not age test all users
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Poland's Nawrocki talks drone defence in Paris and Berlin
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Trump's fossil fuel agenda challenged in youth climate suit
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US strikes another alleged Venezuelan drug boat as tensions rise
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Spanish PM calls for Israel to be barred from international sport
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UK aristocrat, partner get 14 years for baby daughter's manslaughter
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Trump admin leaves door open for tougher PFAS drinking water standards
A day after US President Donald Trump's administration announced it was scrapping existing limits on several toxic "forever chemicals" in drinking water, a top official said new standards would be drawn up -- and may end up even stricter.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin said Thursday its decision -- which retains previous limits for just two of the most notorious PFAS compounds while rescinding them for four others -- was procedural and temporary in nature.
When former president Joe Biden's EPA issued the original rule in 2024, it was challenged by chemical industry and water utility groups who argued, among other things, that the agency had improperly combined two key steps in the process: determining that a chemical poses health risks and proposing a rule.
Biden's rule had set the maximum allowable concentration for the four additional PFAS -- including GenX, a dangerous chemical that has contaminated drinking water in the Cape Fear river basin of North Carolina -- at 10 parts per trillion.
Rather than wait for a court ruling, Zeldin told reporters he agreed "there was a procedural error that we are addressing."
"Quite frankly, there's a possibility that at the end of the process, a new number could be lower, could be higher," he added, stressing that the revised standards would be guided by science. He did not provide a timeline for their finalization.
- 'Have it both ways' -
The announcement was met with skepticism from Melanie Benesh of the Environmental Working Group.
"Administrator Zeldin is almost posturing like they have no choice but to go back and redo it -- but they are making a choice, to switch sides in the litigation," she told AFP. "It seems like the EPA is trying to have it both ways."
There is bipartisan support for action on PFAS, with some of the hardest-hit communities -- in West Virginia, rural New York, and North Carolina -- located in Republican strongholds, and billions earmarked by Congress to address the problem in the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
At least 158 million Americans are estimated to have drinking water contaminated with perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which accumulate in the body and have been linked to cancer, birth defects, reduced fertility, and behavioral disorders -- even at extremely low levels.
Nicknamed "forever chemicals" because they can take millions of years to break down, PFAS were first synthesized in the 1930s and are defined by their ultra-strong carbon-fluorine bonds, which give them extreme heat resistance as well as water and grease-repellent properties.
Today, they blanket the planet -- from the Tibetan Plateau to the ocean floor -- and circulate in the blood of nearly every American.
L.Miller--AMWN