3M Corp., Honeywell Inc., and other companies with sites in Minnesota will take part in a new state monitoring plan to detect “forever chemicals” that could be used to further regulate hundreds of industrial facilities, operating landfills, and community water systems.
The monitoring plan, which Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Commissioner Katrina Kessler announced Tuesday, is intended to measure releases of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at 379 facilities, which will have to pay for the monitoring over the next two years. Kessler’s agency plans to release summary data of the monitoring in 2024, she said.
The announcement is the latest ...
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