What is PFAS?

PFAS stands for "per- and poly-fluorinated alkyl substances" โ€” a family of synthetic chemicals that do not break down naturally. Estimates of the number of PFAS compounds vary from around 4,700 (OECD) to over 10,000 depending on the definition used. They are commonly called "forever chemicals" because they persist in the environment and human body indefinitely.

PFAS are synthetic chemicals that build up in soil, water, plants, animals, and people. Safety limits are evolving. Some authorities have set very low safe intake levels. When PFAS levels exceed these limits, it is a public health concern.

PFOA Classification

In November 2023, the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified PFOA as a Group 1 carcinogen: carcinogenic to humans.

Source: International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), Monographs Volume 135, November 2023

Understanding IARC Group 1 Classification

IARC classifies hazard, not risk. Group 1 means there is enough evidence that PFOA can cause cancer in humans. It does not mean everyone exposed will develop cancer.

Other Group 1 agents include asbestos, tobacco smoke, and processed meat. These substances have very different actual risk levels depending on how much exposure someone has and for how long. The classification tells us the hazard is real. Individual risk depends on the nature and extent of exposure.

Official Health Classifications

PFOA (Historic Discharges 1950s-2012)

IARC Group 1 Carcinogen (November 2023)

Classification: "Carcinogenic to humans" โ€” the highest cancer hazard classification

EEA-NH4 (Current Discharges 2012-Present)

ECHA Reproductive Toxicity Category 2

Classification: "Suspected of damaging fertility or the unborn child" (reprotoxic)

EEA-NH4 is a fluorochemical used as a replacement for PFOA in manufacturing.

C8 Science Panel Findings (PFOA)

Probable Links to 6 Conditions:

Based on a study of 69,030 participants

Summary: PFOA was used at the Hillhouse industrial estate for around 60 years โ€” first by ICI, then by AGC Chemicals Europe. It is now classified as carcinogenic to humans. AGC replaced PFOA with EEA-NH4 in 2012. EEA-NH4 has not been tested for cancer risk, but it is classified as suspected of harming fertility and unborn children.

Comparison with Other Regulated Substances

Substance Environmental Persistence UK Restrictions
Lead in petrol 100-300 years [persistence estimate โ€” specific source to be confirmed] Phased out 2000 (Motor Fuel (Composition and Content) Regulations 1999)
Asbestos Does not degrade [mineral fibre] Import/supply banned 1999 (Asbestos (Prohibitions) Regulations)
PFOA Indefinite (does not break down in nature) EU ban 2020 (retained in UK law as assimilated law)
EEA-NH4 Indefinite (does not break down in nature) Not restricted (as of February 2026)

Sources: UK legislation (Motor Fuel Regulations 1999; Asbestos Regulations 1999); ECHA classification database; IARC Monographs. Note: This table shows regulatory timeline; it is not intended to imply toxicological equivalence between these substances.

PFOA Phase-Out and Replacement

PFOA use at the Hillhouse estate ceased in 2012 following regulatory phase-out. AGC then began using EEA-NH4 (a fluorochemical used as a replacement for PFOA in manufacturing) as a replacement processing aid. Key points:

  • ECHA classifies EEA-NH4 as "reprotoxic" โ€” suspected of damaging fertility or the unborn child
  • No long-term cancer studies have been completed for EEA-NH4 [based on review of ECHA database and EA risk evaluation โ€” no carcinogenicity assessment available as of February 2026]
  • The Environment Agency's 2023 risk evaluation describes EEA-NH4 as "very persistent" (it doesn't break down) and "mobile" (it spreads easily through soil and water)
  • The reported discharge rate is around 800 kg per year into the River Wyre
Source: Environment Agency EEA-NH4 risk evaluation, April 2023