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Washington is suing agrichemical giant Monsanto over pollution from polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).
It is the first state to file such a suit, joining cities including Portland, Oregon, and Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose, Long Beach, and San Diego in California. Those cases are ongoing.
Gov. Jay Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson announced the lawsuit at a news conference Thursday afternoon. The PCBs were used in many industrial and commercial applications, including in paint, coolants, sealants, and hydraulic fluids. PCB contamination impacts rivers, lakes, and bays around the US.
Monsanto was the sole producer of PCBs between 1935 and 1979, when Congress banned them.
“PCBs are in every waterway in the state,” said Ferguson. He described PCBs as “one of the most pervasive pollutants in history.”
Gov. Inslee, appearing with Ferguson, spoke of an “omnipresent and terrifically toxic material” and noted that concentrations of PCBs in the southern resident orca population are “one of the highest recorded for any place on Earth.”
PCBs are a major reason the Duwamish River – Seattle’s only river – is now an EPA Superfund cleanup site.
The chemicals accumulate in the tissues of fish and other animals. The state Department of Health currently has 13 fish consumption advisories related to PCBs, covering the Columbia River, all of Lake Washington, and 21 miles of the Wenatchee River, reports SeattlePi.
PCBs have been shown to cause a variety of health problems, including cancer in animals as well as effects on the immune, nervous, endocrine, and reproductive systems.
Naturally, Monsanto claims the case lacks merit:
“PCBs sold at the time were a lawful and useful product that was then incorporated by third parties into other useful products,” Charla Lord, a company spokeswoman, wrote. “If improper disposal or other improper uses created the necessity for clean-up costs, then these other third parties would bear responsibility for these costs.”
But there’s a problem with that claim:
Internal Monsanto documents that show the company long knew about the danger the chemicals posed. In 1937, an internal memo said testing on animals showed “systemic toxic effects” from prolonged exposure by inhaling PCB fumes or ingestion. In 1969, a company committee on PCBs noted, “There is too much customer/market need and selfishly too much Monsanto profit to go out.”