WASHINGTON – New federal laws will soon address a national chemical pollution problem and could put 3M and other producers of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — better known as PFAS — into a multibillion-dollar financial bind.
Once marketed as making items ranging from clothing to cookware resistant to water, grease and heat, PFAS are being recast legislatively and legally as part of a public health crisis that could rival lead in paint and asbestos.
Substances such as 3M's Scotchgard have been linked to cancer, reproductive problems and immune system troubles. They have sparked multiple lawsuits by states and localities. Now they face unprecedented controls and scrutiny from 35 bills in Congress, including several measures already grafted on to the nation's must-pass National Defense Authorization Act.
"It seems extraordinary that you have this much activity on a bipartisan scale," said Albert Lin, a University of California, Davis law professor specializing in environmental issues. "If I was 3M, I'd be very concerned. … A lot of different legal hooks might come into play."
The financial consequences are beginning to resonate. Over a few days last week, a Wall Street analyst downgraded 3M stock because of PFAS problems. Then, the House approved PFAS control amendments to the defense bill, including a hazardous designation for all PFAS that could force 3M to pay billions of dollars in environmental cleanup costs.
The Senate has already passed a defense bill that includes new PFAS limits and monitoring. Whatever emerges from a conference committee, things appear materially worse for PFAS producers.
3M declined to comment about the impact of new PFAS laws and lawsuits on its operations except to say it is "currently reviewing the different proposed PFAS legislation and [is] not prepared to comment on any particular bill at this time."
In last week's downgrade of 3M stock by RBC Capital Markets, an RBC analyst determined that "PFAS remains an acute risk with product liability still unquantifiable/unreserved" and noted that 3M's stock has been trading below its historic valuation range, applying traditional yardsticks used in investments. It's reasonable to assume investors can attribute the decline to unresolved PFAS liabilities, RBC's research team added, which means the market thinks pollution issues have reduced the company's total valuation by $8 billion.