https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/health/cancer-linked-forever-chemicals-detected-in-sydneys-drinking-water/
Testing detected the highest levels of contamination at Cascade Dam water filtration plants in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney
Authorities in Sydney said on Tuesday that they have detected cancer-linked “forever chemicals” in several of Sydney’s drinking water catchments for the first time.
Sydney Water confirmed that testing conducted in
June and July detected per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a collective
term for more than 10,000 chemicals also known as ‘forever chemicals’ because
of their persistence in the environment and human body, at water filtration
plants across the New South Wales (NSW) city.
The testing
detected the highest levels of contamination at Cascade Dam water filtration
plants in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, which supplies water to nearly
30,000 people, Xinhua news agency reported.
Sydney Water found the PFAS perfluorooctane
sulfonate (PFOS) at up to 0.0164 micrograms per litre and PFHxS, another type
of PFAS, at up to 0.0142 micrograms per litre on June 25.
The chemicals were found
in low levels for the first time at three more water filtration plants across
Greater Sydney’s west and at North Richmond in the northwest where PFAS was
previously detected in drinking water in 2019.
The results show PFAS concentrations are within
Australia’s current official drinking water safety guidelines.
However, Australia’s guidelines are under review
after the US Environmental Protection Agency in April declared PFAS chemicals
as probable carcinogens and found there was no safe level of exposure to PFOS.
“There is regular consultation between Sydney
Water, WaterNSW and NSW Health to assess any potential risk of PFAS or any
other contaminant to Sydney’s drinking supply,” Sydney Water said in a
statement.
The results were published on the same day as a
separate Australian-first study that found PFOS in platypuses in NSW.
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