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Compostable packaging could leach PFAS to environment

Source:Food Bev Asia Release Date:2019-05-30 113
Food & Beverage
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As the use of compostable food packaging increases, researchers further investigate the release of PFAS – substances that give packaging their oil and water repelling qualities – into the environment.    

Compostable food containers are a solution to waste reduction as they degrade into nutrient-rich organic matter, or fertilizer. However, a research in American Chemical Society’s Environmental Science & Technology Letters says the substances that allow these packaging to repel oil and water, known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), could be released into the soil. Any harmful effects of applying PFAS to crops are yet unknown.  

PFAS have flame-retardant and water- and oil-repellent properties that make them popular in manufacturing. Two long-chain PFAS, perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS), have been linked to negative health effects, so companies in the U.S. have voluntarily phased out their production. Many manufacturers have switched to shorter-chain PFAS, whose health effects are less well known. Previous research has shown that PFAS in biosolids applied as fertilizer can migrate from soil to plants and then accumulate in humans through the food chain. Because compostable food packaging is becoming increasingly popular, Linda Lee and colleagues wanted to find out how much PFAS end up in the composted material.

Obtaining 10 samples from five states: nine from commercial facilities and one from a backyard compost bin, the researchers extracted perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs), which are compounds produced by microbial degradation of PFAS during composting, and analyzed them using mass spectrometry. The samples from seven facilities that accepted compostable food packaging had higher total levels of PFAAs than the two that didn’t or the one from the backyard bin, which did not contain food packaging. The researchers found PFAAs corresponding to PFOA and PFOS, which are still produced in some countries, in all of the samples, but most of the detected compounds were short-chain PFAAs. The results from this study contributed to the passage in 2018 of the State of Washington’s Healthy Food Packaging Act, which will ban the use of PFAS in paper food packaging after 1 January 2022, the researchers say.

The authors acknowledge funding from Purdue University and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. – American Chemical Society

 

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