George Rest, Mike Hicks and Janet Egli
March 13, 2023
Client alert: USEPA Proposed PFAS National Primary Drinking Water Regulations
The proposed regulations are the first national regulations that establish enforceable maximum contaminant levels for six PFAS, signaling the expansion of regulatory reach.
We look deeper into the proposal and the implications for water companies, municipalities, industry and commerce.
- Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA)
- Hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid (HFPO-DA) and its ammonium salt, commonly known as GenX chemicals
- Perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS)
- Perfluorobutane sulfonic acid (PFBS)
- Evaluate the potential for PFAS to impact your operations, concerns and third parties under current and anticipated near-term regulations
- Perform a comprehensive PFAS-based risk assessment for your situation, including operational, financial, business and reputational risk
- Seek professional guidance on the breadth and depth of advisory services that may be required for your situation such as environmental, legal, financial and risk communication
- Initial and routine compliance monitoring and the associated compliance considerations
- Sampling requirements and compliance calculations
- Public notifications of violations
- Challenges complying with the proposed regulations
- A system is deemed out of compliance if a single EPTDS RAA exceeds any MCL
- While a single detection above the MCL will not necessarily bring the system out of compliance, a single sample may bring a RAA above the MCL if detections are high enough
- HI exceedances may be achieved even if only one of the four PFAS is present, if the measured PFAS exceeds its HBWC
- Systems may collect more samples per quarter to calculate their RAAs, averages must be calculated per sampling point (per EPTDS)
- Limited data available on matrix effect of salinity or organic materials potentially affecting results
- Quality control, contamination, risk of triggering non-compliance or monitoring due to inaccurate sample collection and processing
- Limited availability of certified laboratories causing longer turn-around times which could result in extended noncompliance durations
- Compliance is determined by RAAs, implying that a year of data should be available before the compliance period starts
- The cost of sample collection and analyses could be significant
- Lowering the health advisories (HA) of PFOA and PFOS by several orders or magnitude to near zero (interim HAs of 0.004 and 0.02 ppt, respectively)
- Proposing the designation of PFOA and PFOS as hazardous substances under CERCLA section 102(a). This section considers potential danger to health or the environment, regardless of cost or proof of harm, and has not been previously employed by the agency to designate a hazardous substance
- Setting a HI considering a mixture of four PFAS as an MCL is first-of-a-kind for SDWA regulations
- Setting MCLGs for PFOA and PFOS at zero
- Setting MCLs for PFOA and PFOS at the same levels as the PQLs
- Source identification and control
- Sampling and analysis
- Treatment technology evaluation
- Biosolids/residual management
- Process/detail engineering
- Turnkey installation
Want to know more?
George Rest
Sr Officer 1
+1 301-731-1162
Janet Egli
Industrial Market Lead, Water & Wastewater Treatment
+1 615-277-7511