Proposed North Carolina Order Requires Chemours to Reduce GenX Emissions, Pay $12M Fine
State environmental officials have proposed a consent order calling on a North Carolina chemical plant to reduce emissions of a compound and pay a $12 million civil penalty.
The N.C. Department of Environmental Quality said in a news release Nov. 21 the order requires Chemours to reduce GenX air emissions and provide permanent replacement drinking water supplies. The proposed consent order is between DEQ, Cape Fear River Watch and Chemours.
“People deserve access to clean drinking water and this order is a significant step in our ongoing effort to protect North Carolina communities and the environment.” said DEQ Secretary Michael S. Regan. “Today’s announcement advances the science and regulation of PFAS compounds and gives North Carolina families much needed relief.”
In addition to the civil penalty, the order calls for Chemours to pay an additional $1 million for investigative costs. Additional penalties will apply if Chemours fails to meet the conditions and deadlines established in the order.
The consent order includes specific conditions to ensure protection of human health and the environment. Among its many requirements, the order states that Chemours must:
- Provide permanent drinking water supplies in the form of either a public waterline connection or whole building filtration system for those with drinking water wells with GenX above 140 parts per trillion or applicable health advisory.
- Provide, install and maintain three under-sink reverse osmosis drinking water systems for well owners with combined PFAS levels above 70 parts per trillion or any individual PFAS compound above 10 parts per trillion.
- Reduce air emissions of GenX through control technology with a schedule of reduction milestones.
- By Dec. 31, 2018, complete construction of new emission controls to achieve a 92 percent reduction of facility-wide GenX compound air emissions compared to the 2017 baseline level.
- By Dec. 31, 2019, install a thermal oxidizer to control all PFAS from multiple process streams, demonstrate PFAS reductions at an effectiveness of 99.99 percent efficiency and a 99 percent reduction facility-wide for GenX emissions compared to the 2017 baseline level.
Comments on the proposed order will be accepted until Dec. 21.
Attorneys for the environmental agency said in a lawsuit that a months-long investigation by DEQ found Chemours contaminated the state’s air, surface water and groundwater through its release of GenX.
Source: North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, Associated Press