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February 13 2002
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Flame Retardant in Furniture Causes Concern

 

Chemical flame retardant used in foam furniture padding is accumulating so rapidly in the breast milk of nursing mothers that environmentalists and some scientists are expressing concern, and Europe has moved to ban one form of it.

Little is known about the toxic nature of the chemical, polybrominated diphenyl ether, commonly known as PBDE. Early studies show it poses some of the same dangers as PCB's and DDT, two chemicals that were banned in the United States for their detrimental health effects.

One form of PBDE will be banned next year in Europe, where new chemical agents must be proved safe before they can be used. United States law requires proof of harm or risk before a chemical is banned.

Like PCB's and DDT, PBDE is a persistent organic pollutant, meaning it can remain in the environment for years without breaking down. Some of these pollutants have such an affinity for fat that they build up in the bodies of humans and other animals from before birth until death.

"It seems that PBDE's are an important, but generally unrecognized, persistent organic pollutant," Robert C. Hale, a professor at the Virginia Institute of Marine Sciences, and five colleagues wrote in the journal Nature a few months ago.

Dr. Gina Solomon, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said: "There is an enormous need to act quickly when there is a problem with a chemical that is not only toxic but is persistent and accumulates."

Industry uses several forms of PBDE to decrease the flammability of various plastics. Only one form used mostly in polyurethane foam furniture padding has been found in the environment and breast milk. Environmental Protection Agency records show that Great Lakes Chemical is the only domestic manufacturer of that form of PBDE.

Professor Hale, who stops short of calling for a ban on the chemical, has hypothesized that discarded furniture is a major source of PBDE in the environment. Whenever anybody tosses out an old sofa, he explained, nature goes to work. Water and sunlight break the foam into crumbling pieces that are eventually ground to dust. Insects have been observed munching at the material. From there, the chemical travels up the food chain to humans.

Professor Hale has found PBDE's virtually everywhere he has looked; in a small river along the North Carolina-Virginia border, he found fish with the highest levels of PBDE ever recorded in an animal. He has also collected sewage sludge samples from four states; each sample has high concentrations of PBDE.

In 1998, Swedish scientists reported that levels of PBDE in breast milk had increased 40-fold since 1972.

Users of PBDE could substitute another flame-retardant chemical in its place. But PBDE has properties other flame retardants do not, Mr. Campbell, the Great Lakes Chemical spokesman, said. It does not discolor foam or decrease its durability as much as other flame retardants do. And though all flame retardants evaporate into room air in trace amounts, PBDE does so at lower levels than many alternatives.

New York Times January 30, 2002



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

Not much to do here except beware that we now have another new chemical to be concerned about. You can be guaranteed that the problem with PBDE will get far worse before it gets any better. Many children will likely suffer birth defects before science finally wakes up and bans this chemical.

This will likely follow the same story as PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls). If you are not familiar with this problem you will want to read the previous article I posted on this topic.

Related Articles:

Why The Precautionary Principle? A Meditation On Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) And The Breasts Of Mothers

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