3M Co. has agreed to give the state of Minnesota $850 million to resolve the biggest environmental lawsuit in the state's history over the decades-long contamination of groundwater in the east metro area.
On Tuesday, the day that the trial between the state and 3M was set to begin, Attorney General Lori Swanson said the money will be used to clean up contaminated water in the communities that were affected by the perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) used in consumer products like Teflon and Scotchgard that were dumped for years at four sites in Washington County. The agreement provides money for improved drinking water infrastructure, sustainability and natural resource projects. About 12 percent of the total will be paid to the national law firm Swanson retained on a contingency basis to represent the state.
Swanson said at a news conference that she was pleased with the settlement, which attorneys have been negotiating for weeks, and said that the money can be used to improve drinking water for individual homeowners and municipal drinking water systems. The company also agreed to pay up to another $40 million in the next five years as part of a remediation agreement it made with the state in 2008, bringing the total to about $890 million.
3M officials also said that the settlement allows them to address contamination in the area of the metro where many of its employees live and where it's operated for years.
"This agreement reflects 3M's long-standing commitment to always acting with integrity and conducting business in an ethical and sustainable way," said John Banovetz, 3M's senior vice president of research and development. "While we have never believed there is a PFC-related health issue, this agreement allows us to move past this litigation and work together with the state on activities and projects to benefit the environment and our communities."
While a major lawsuit in Minnesota, it is only one of about 37 PFC-related cases against 3M across the country tied to contaminated drinking water.
The settlement amount is dwarfed by the $7.1 billion settlement in 1998 between the state and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota and the tobacco companies. But it's among the larger awards in most environmental cases in recent years. While large, the settlement is probably not a big financial hit to 3M, said Matt Arnold, stock analyst at Edward Jones. It equals about 1 percent of the company's market value, and the company has $4.1 billion in cash on its balance sheet.
In the lawsuit filed in 2010 by Swanson and the Pollution Control Agency, the state claimed that 3M knowingly contaminated the drinking water of 67,000 residents of east-metro communities, causing up to $5 billion in potential damage to property values, wildlife and human health. The company has denied wrongdoing, saying it followed the law in disposing of its industrial wastes and that it voluntarily stopped making the chemicals in 2002. It also said that it settled the matter with the state in a 2008 agreement in which it agreed to clean up the chemicals and pay for clean drinking water in the affected communities.