Manufacturing for sure was a huge contributor but that’s manufacturing of products with pfoa or derivatives in general, since those were widely used. Which is still bad, but more directly relevant here, cookware hasn’t itself been much of an issue to people’s health afaik.
For me, the big deal is the “forever” nature. These chemicals will continue accumulating in the environment, in the food chain, in people’s bodies, essentially forever. They don’t biodegrade and they’re getting ubiquitous enough that you couldn’t clean up the contamination if you had to.
I also worry that it’s not a chemical, but a large class of chemicals. There are many variations and they have not been individually evaluated.
And there have been studies showing harm in animals, including harm when the accumulation in a creature gets large enough to physically interfere with things.
Those all add up to enough risk that we really need to cut back
Manufacturing for sure was a huge contributor but that’s manufacturing of products with pfoa or derivatives in general, since those were widely used. Which is still bad, but more directly relevant here, cookware hasn’t itself been much of an issue to people’s health afaik.
For me, the big deal is the “forever” nature. These chemicals will continue accumulating in the environment, in the food chain, in people’s bodies, essentially forever. They don’t biodegrade and they’re getting ubiquitous enough that you couldn’t clean up the contamination if you had to.
I also worry that it’s not a chemical, but a large class of chemicals. There are many variations and they have not been individually evaluated.
And there have been studies showing harm in animals, including harm when the accumulation in a creature gets large enough to physically interfere with things.
Those all add up to enough risk that we really need to cut back