EPA Moves to Roll Back Key PFAS Water Regulations, Extends Compliance Timeline
- The Environmental Protection Agency plans to roll back limits on several types of PFAS in drinking water, while extending compliance deadlines for PFOA and PFOS until 2031.
- Water utilities expressed relief at the deadline extension but raised concerns about the expense of filtering PFAS.
- Environmental advocates condemned the rollback, claiming it will jeopardize public health and safety.
- Michigan has its own stricter PFAS limits, but potential legal challenges could affect these regulations after the rollbacks.
366 Articles
366 Articles

WaterNSW admits PFAS contamination could date from 1992
The Blue Mountains drinking water contamination with “forever chemicals” occurred between a 1992 truck crash and 2007, when a toxic fire fighting foam was banned.
What the U.S. partial rollback of the ‘forever chemical’ drinking water rule means
On Wednesday, the Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to weaken limits on some harmful 'forever chemicals' in drinking water roughly a year after the Biden administration finalized the first-ever national standards.
The EPA is rolling back some rules for drinking water. Here's what that means for Mass.
The Environmental Protection Agency will roll back some regulations for toxic “forever chemicals” in drinking water. The agency will keep other rules for PFAS chemicals but extend the compliance deadline by two years.
Guideline levels for PFOA and PFOS in drinking water: the role of scientific uncertainty, risk assessment decisions, and social factors
Communities across the U.S. are discovering drinking water contaminated by perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and determining appropriate actions. There are currently no federal PFAS drinking water standards despite widespread drinking water contamination, ubiquitous population-level exposure, and toxicological and epidemiological evidence of adverse health effects. Absent federal PFAS standards, multiple U.S. states have devel…
EPA delays PFAS limits, drops standards for four chemicals | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
The Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday that it would uphold drinking water standards for two harmful “forever chemicals,” present in the tap water of millions of Americans. But it said it would delay deadlines to meet those standards and roll back limits on four other related chemicals.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 59% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage