Pollution
NRC examined the eggs of hobby chickens from the vicinity of Chemours chemical factory. In many cases they contain far too much PFAS. That is dangerous. "Eating these eggs is harmful to public health, especially for children."
Lucas BrouwersMark Lievisse Adriaanse
August 31, 2023
Reading time 12 minutes
Marco's chickens are laying well. The forty-year-old shares a chicken coop with his neighbors on the vacant lot behind his house. From his kitchen table, the born Sliedrechter looks out over the Teflon factory of Chemours in Dordrecht, on the other side of the Merwede. In 2018, the advice was given not to eat fruit and vegetables from your own garden in the immediate vicinity of the factory, due to contamination with PFAS. Since then, Marco's family no longer eats eggs as a precaution.
This spring, NRC collected more than forty eggs from nine private individuals and farmers in a radius of six kilometers around the Teflon factory and had them analyzed for PFAS by a laboratory at the VU University in Amsterdam. PFAS are a collection of chemicals commonly used by the chemical industry, which hardly break down and can be toxic. The substances lower the resistance and are carcinogenic in high concentrations.
According to international research, eating eggs from free-range chickens around chemical factories contributes to an unhealthy high concentration of PFAS in the blood of local residents. In the Netherlands, this is the first time that research has been carried out into PFAS contamination of eggs around a factory. Despite several signals about the danger of contaminated eggs, government agencies such as RIVM have not yet investigated this.
According to international research, eating eggs from free-range chickens around chemical factories contributes to an unhealthy high concentration of PFAS in the blood of local residents
Marco, who does not want his surname in the newspaper for privacy reasons, appears to be rightly concerned: the eggs of hobby chickens from the Sliedrecht and Alblasserwaard area often contain such high concentrations of PFAS that eating them can damage health. An important source of PFAS in Sliedrecht eggs is the Teflon factory Chemours in Dordrecht. It discharged large quantities of PFAS into the environment for decades, even though it knew that the substances were harmful, according to a Zembla broadcast in June. On Friday morning, the company must account for this in a hearing in the Provincial Council of South Holland.
Half an egg a week
Eggs from five of the nine locations contain too much PFAS. Those eggs exceed the European food standards for PFAS. Eating one egg a week could already be harmful to health in these places, according to research by NRC. The PFAS in the eggs from three of the nine sites can be traced directly to Chemours' PFAS emissions: they contain types of PFAS that the factory emitted in the past.
Also read 'Chemours wanted to settle for millions in PFAS case'
In Marco's garden, located on the dike and directly opposite the factory, the eggs were most heavily contaminated last spring. By eating half an egg a week, an adult man would already ingest more PFAS than is healthy according to the European guidelines. Children of four ingest 20 times more PFAS than is safe by eating one egg a week.
MOST PFAS IN EGG OF FREE-RANGE HOBBY CHICKEN NEAR CHEMOURS
Number of times PFAS advice is exceeded per egg per location…
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https://www.nrc.nl/nieuws/2023/08/3...zwaar-vervuild-met-pfas-van-chemours-a4173207