Toxic Sewage Sludge in Your (Non-Organic) Food?

STOP SEWAGE SLUDGE

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Even though USDA Organic standards prohibit the spreading of toxic sewage sludge on certified organic farms, something OCA and the organic community fought hard for from 1997-2002, it is routine practice for America’s “conventional” (chemical-intensive, energy-intensive, GMO, factory-style) farmers to allow sewage sludge to be sprayed on their fields as a low-cost or no-cost “fertilizer.” But as our fellow activists in the Alliance for Natural Health point out, we’re not just talking about human and animal excrement on the fields of non-organic farms, but deadly PFAS “Forever Chemicals” as well:

“Your food and drinking water could be contaminated with PFAS ‘forever chemicals,’ at levels that are hundreds of times higher than what is considered safe, but the EPA is too busy looking out for industry to care.

PFAS contamination threatens the integrity of our food supply and is upending the lives of farmers. This is the latest outrage in what is quickly becoming a national crisis in which PFAS ‘forever’ chemicals, linked to a variety of diseases, are polluting our waterways and our food—and regulators have just admitted that these chemicals are more dangerous than previously thought. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) seems determined to protect industry rather than enact meaningful standards to protect us from these dangerous chemicals. This has to stop.

Our food is contaminated with PFAS via the use of biosolids on farmland. Biosolids are a euphemism for sewage sludge, municipal sewage that has been processed to obtain clean water, leaving behind a concentrated sludge full of contaminants. This used to be dumped into the ocean until the practice was banned in 1988 because it was too toxic.

Biosolids are contaminated extensively with PFAS and are used extensively in agriculture. In fact, some estimate that as many as 5 percent of all crop fields could be using biosolids contaminated with PFAS. Low levels of PFAS have already been detected in vegetables, honey, dairy products, eggs, various meat products, and both bottled and tap water.

Even low-level exposures are dangerous because PFAS accumulate and persist in the body. In fact, the EPA just released new health advisories regarding PFAS in drinking water. The EPA previously suggested PFOA, a common PFAS chemical, be limited to 70 parts per trillion in drinking water; the new suggestion is 0.004 parts per trillion. We use the term ‘suggestion’ because these levels are non-enforceable, and the EPA is still allowing companies to dump these chemicals in our water.”

Read More and Take Action: Sewage Contaminating Your Food