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Why PFAS chemical levels are rapidly rising in Tucson groundwater

By June 12, 2021June 15th, 2021PFAS in the news

The sudden spike in PFAS contamination in wells serving a south-side water treatment plant is a product of humans and nature, experts say.

Tucson Water could well have increased the buildup of these chemicals in the wells by pumping tainted water out of the wells and toward the plant, said one scientist and a city official. The pumping can pull more heavily contaminated water lying south of those wells into the wells, boosting their PFAS concentrations.

At the same time, other experts say some PFAS compounds, unlike the trichlororethylene that’s been in the south-side’s aquifer for many decades, can move quickly in groundwater, rather than attaching to soil particles that store water in the underground aquifer. Read more…