The virtually indestructible Pfas waste puts largely low-income neighborhoods at risk, public health advocates say
Tom Perkins
Sat 30 May 2026 13.00 BST
The nations garbage incinerators are largely failing to eliminate
Pfas forever chemicals air pollution, and are putting people in largely low-income neighborhoods at risk, public health advocates and independent experts warn.
The powerful waste management industry is increasingly pushing incinerators as a solution to virtually indestructible Pfas waste, and
a new industry trade group report alleges Minnesotas incinerators
are reducing their forever chemical emissions by 99.6%. Other incinerator operators
have made similar
reduction claims.
The report also comes amid fights to shut down incinerators in
Miami,
Philadelphia and
Baltimore, and a lawsuit filed against the Environmental Protection Agency over what it characterizes as a weak update to its emissions standards for the facilities, which do not include Pfas. Nearly 100 municipal or hazardous waste incinerators operate nationally, including seven in Minnesota.
The new Minnesota report is full of bad assumptions, incomplete data, misleading language, and fails to conduct proper testing, according to an analysis by the Zero Burn Coalition advocacy group and reviews by independent incineration experts.