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Beyond DuPont’s Game Face On Federal Teflon Chemical Inquiry Lie Aggressive and Illegal Efforts To Control Damage
June 2003
A routine-seeming government meeting this Friday marks the public debut of what the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says is one of the most sweeping regulatory inquiries it has ever mounted on an industrial chemical. The chemical happens to be the key manufacturing aid for what is unquestionably DuPont’s marquee product brand, Teflon. DuPont officials have put the best possible face on this exceedingly rare EPA inquiry into the Teflon chemical, known as perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), ever since the agency announced the effort in April 2003. EPA launched the investigation citing concerns about the substance’s toxicity, its extraordinary persistence in the environment, and the fact that it has turned up in the blood of almost everyone in the U.S. — especially children. Neither government nor DuPont scientists can explain why. DuPont executives gamely claim to welcome intensive government scrutiny of a chemical that underpins a multi-billion dollar business. Indeed, company officials have gone so far as to say they are encouraged by the prospect that EPA might begin to regulate a chemical has gone unregulated for more than a half century. The controversy is enough of a serious threat that DuPont CEO Charles Holliday, Jr. took the unusual step of opening the company’s most recent shareholder meeting with a detailed defense of Teflon’s and PFOA’s safety. His speech marked a shift in the company’s defensive position, from the offices of its Teflon plant in Parkersburg, West Virginia, to corporate headquarters, in Wilmington, Delaware. The defensive lines have likewise shifted in cyberspace. This spring, DuPont began giving prominence to the Teflon controversy on the corporation’s main home page, supplanting the obscure, low-profile Internet site to which it previously had confined comment on the controversy. But a dramatically different corporate stance is evident in the company’s aggressive and, in some cases, illegal maneuvering to stave off the EPA inquiry, contain legal liabilities and keep the unfolding story out of the media. Some of the drama has played out in Washington, where DuPont has hired a legion of lobbyists, including former EPA officials, to work the system at the agency and the White House. But the most revealing indications of the extreme measures DuPont has been willing to take to protect its Teflon franchise have emerged in a West Virginia courtroom. There, 3,000 people have filed a class-action lawsuit against DuPont for polluting their tap water over decades with PFOA from the company’s Teflon manufacturing facility in Parkersburg. In that same courtroom, a local family recently settled a separate suit with DuPont for water pollution that killed their livestock.