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3M sets 2025 deadline to stop making ‘forever chemicals’

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The move comes amid rising legal pressures over damage caused by the chemicals.

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3M’s current annual net sales of manufactured forever chemicals (PFAS) are about US$1.3 billion. (Facebook pic/3M)

CALIFORNIA:
US industrial conglomerate 3M today set a deadline of 2025 to stop making PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals,” that are used in everything from cell phones to semiconductors – and have been linked to illnesses ranging from cancer to heart problems to low birthweights.

The per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances are known as forever chemicals because the substances do not break down quickly and have in recent years been found in dangerous concentrations in drinking water, soils, and foods across the country.

The move comes amid rising legal pressures over damage caused by the chemicals.

Last month, 3M and DuPont de Nemours were among several companies to be sued by California’s attorney general to recover clean-up costs.

Pressure on companies to stop producing the chemicals has increased in recent years, with investors managing US$8 trillion in assets earlier this year writing to 54 companies urging them to phase out their use.

3M’s current annual net sales of manufactured PFAS are about US$1.3 billion – with estimated earnings before interest, tax, and depreciation margins of about 16%.

The company expects to incur related total pre-tax charges of about US$1.3 billion to US$2.3 billion over the course of its exit from PFAS.

In the fourth quarter, 3M expects to take an estimated pre-tax charge between US$0.7 billion and US$1.0 billion, primarily non-cash and related to asset impairments.

In August this year, the Biden administration said it will propose designating certain “forever chemicals” as hazardous substances under the nation’s Superfund programme.

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