Is the National Academy of Sciences
’ recommendation that perchlorate not exceed 23 parts per
billion from food and water good news or bad news?
Is the National Academy of Sciences’ recommendation that perchlorate not exceed 23 parts per billion from food and water good news or bad news? It depends on how you look at it.

When you consider that the NAS committee that issued the recommendation was convened by the defense department, which has advocated a 200 ppb standard for perchlorate in drinking water, 23 ppb looks pretty good.

When you consider that the federal Environmental Protection Agency’s current guideline is 1 ppb, the NAS standard is disturbing.

What it really all comes down to is trust. Can we trust the science that the NAS committee reviewed, and can we trust their interpretation and analysis?

Given that the NAS reviewed five small studies, all with serious limitations, we don’t think this latest salvo in the perchlorate wars is the final one. Further, the committee was tainted by the whiff of scandal – three original committee members left the panel due conflicts of interest, and the National Resource Defense Council is suing for the release of documents it alleges will show the Bush Administration had undue influence over the contents of the report. It doesn’t add up to trust.

What we need is an unbiased, comprehensive study of the effects of perchlorate at various levels. The study must be untainted by either the defense industry, which wants a high perchlorate standard to reduce its cleanup liability, or by environmental activists, who advocate for low levels.

We are not alone in our perchlorate dilemma. Perchlorate pollutes aquifers across the nation. It has entered our food supply through irrigation. As a nation, we need information. We need to know at what level perchlorate is harmless in our aquifers so that we can restore polluted ground water to safe levels.

We renew our call for a federal, long-term, independent study that will give us the trustworthy data and reliable analysis on perchlorate that this nation so desperately needs.

Without it, safe perchlorate levels are just guesses, and that’s not good enough.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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