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The Boston Channel, USA

Chinese Fluoride In Mass. Water Raises Concern

Team 5 Investigates After Amesbury Pulls Sodium Fluoride From Water Supply

POSTED: 6:12 pm EST March 11, 2010, UPDATED: 10:00 am EDT March 16, 2010 - The Boston Channel

AMESBURY, Mass. -- Fluoride is added to the water most of us drink because the government believes it's a safe and inexpensive way to prevent tooth decay.

However, Team 5 Investigates found the Amesbury Water Department pulled fluoride from its system amid concerns about its supply from China.

Department of Public Works Director Rob Desmarais said after he mixes the white powder with water, 40 percent of it will not dissolve.

"I don't know what it is," Desmarais said. "It's not soluble, and it doesn't appear to be sodium fluoride. So we are not quite sure what it is."

Desmarais said the residue clogs his machines and makes it difficult to get a consistent level of fluoride in the town's water.

Since April the fluoride pumps in Amesbury have been turned off and they will stay that way until Desmarais can find out what's in the fluoride that's imported from China.
Both state and federal health officials told Team 5 Investigates that Chinese fluoride is safe.

The Department of Public Health said it believes that more than 650,000 customers in 44 Massachusetts communities are getting the flouride in question and only Amesbury has temporarily stopped using it.

However, they were unable to say with certainty which of the other 43 communities are actually using the sodium fluoride from China in its water.

The fluoride from China is not used in communities getting water from the MWRA.

The New York company that supplies the fluoride said it is certified by the National Sanitation Foundation which assures the quality of the product. But the NSF said the company has never been on its certification list.

Approximately 1,000 water systems in the United States use the additive to adjust the fluoride in their water supply, according to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Testing continues to determine the precise composition of the residue.

"They should test it to make sure...it is safe for us to drink," said Paul Stewart who lives in Newburyport. He said he has a right to know exactly what's in his water.

"On the same day that I read the story about fluoride coming from China, I also read about stories about melamine that was being contaminated in milk products coming from China," Stewart said. "And then we had another story about more lead in kids toys from China."

Since 2007, most of the sodium fluoride has been imported from China because it's the least expensive on the market.

"I don't think that when it comes to something that I ingest every day that the lowest bidder is good enough," Stewart said.
 

The Boston Channel

24 Feb, 2010 07:54 AM

THE danger of fluoride emissions from Portland Aluminium smelter will be a hot topic at the smelter’s quarterly Community Advisory Network meeting next Tuesday.

New research has shown that up to 90 per cent of kangaroos that graze beside the Portland aluminium smelter have suffered tooth and bone deformities after breathing and ingesting fluoride emissions.

Autopsies performed at Melbourne University on 49 kangaroos culled at Alcoa on a single day last year found all but one were suffering from fluorosis, which leads to excessive bone growths, or lesions, on joints in the paws, ankles and calves.

It can also cause tooth and jaw deformities that hinder eating and foraging.

According to the latest figures in the Federal National Pollutant Inventory, the Portland plant is Victoria’s largest industrial emitter of fluoride dust.

The plant discharges 120 tonnes of fluoride into the air each year, which is equivalent to 22 per cent of the state’s total emissions of 540 tonnes from 74 facilities.

The Environment Protection Authority was first warned of the effect of fluoride dust and fumes on kangaroos living near the Alcoa smelter in 2005, although lameness was detected in some animals grazing there as early as 2001.

Jenny Charles, associate professor in veterinary pathology at Melbourne University, said research had found that up to 90 per cent of the roughly 130 kangaroos living at the Portland site had some form of fluorosis on their teeth and a quarter had visible limb lumps.

EPA director of environmental services Bruce Dawson denied the authority had been slow to reduce emission levels.

He said that while the levels were safe for humans, it was now clear they were too high for some animals and a new level was likely.

However it could take years before research indicated what that level should be.

‘‘We are taking this seriously. Clearly the impact on the local kangaroos and vegetation is not acceptable and action is required,’’ Mr Dawson said.

The eastern grey kangaroos live on the 500-hectare Portland Aluminium site, known as the “Smelter in the Park’’.

The area has been designed with wetlands and parks with recreational trails and activities for community and employee use.

Portland operations manager John Osborne said there had been many successes and challenges of managing the project which he termed “ambitious”.

“The levels of fluoride measured in air near to the smelter are well within human health guideline values and Portland Aluminium is one of the lowest fluoride-emitting smelters in the world,” Mr Osborne said.

“We are, however, deeply concerned by the potential for low-level emissions to affect the health of any animal grazing close to the smelter and will look for further improvement opportunities.”

The company commissioned ongoing research into the local kangaroo population after the issue was highlighted in a paper published in the Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine in 2006.

Mr Osborne said the company had been “incrementally reducing” emissions.

Tuesday’s meeting will be held in the Portland Library at 5.30pm.

-With THE AGE

 

ABC News

- By Candice Wyatt - Updated Tue Feb 23, 2010 3:09pm AEDT

The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) says fluoride from Alcoa's aluminium smelter at Portland is making kangaroos sick.

The EPA's Bruce Dawson says the fluoride is being absorbed by the nearby vegetation which is then being eaten by the kangaroos.

He says the fluoride poisons the kangaroos and makes lesions grow on their bones, which renders them lame.

"Once kangaroos have restricted movement [it] has a significant impact on their welfare. So this is something that needs to be managed and avoided."

He says there is not a lot of information around about the impact of fluoride on kangaroos.

The problem is more common in cattle.

"There was a lot of research done in the 60s and 70s in the United States but this really has just started to emerge in terms of the impacts on kangaroos."

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/02/23/2827687.htm

Kangaroo_ABC_Local_Margaret_Burin.jpg

Photo: Fluoride from a nearby alumininum smelter is making Portland kangaroos ill. (ABC Local : Margaret Burin )

See also Smelter fluoride deforms kangaroos

Brisbane given Fluoride overdose on May 2

Article from: The Courier Mail

Patrick Lion and Peter Michael

May 16, 2009 12:00am

 

THE Bligh Government's handling of the fluoride overdose was in disarray last night after it admitted it got the date wrong about when the bungle occurred.

The Government has admitted residents should have been told they may have drunk water with 20 times the allowable amount of fluoride on May 2 - not May 1 as Premier Anna Bligh said on Thursday.

The blunder is a major embarrassment for the Government, already defending the two-week delay in testing that preceeded this week's health notification to residents on Brisbane's northside.

The Premier was unavailable last night but SEQ Water Grid Manager director Nicole Davis confirmed the water entered supplies in the Brendale and Warner areas on May 2 for three hours between 9am and midday.

It means the water flowed on the Saturday morning putting many more residents at risk.

Read more: Brisbane given Fluoride overdose on May 2

Media Release: 14th May 2009        Queenslanders For Safe Water Air and Food Inc

WORST AUSTRALIAN FLUORIDE ACCIDENT

Premier Bligh  today  announced an accident at the North Pine Dam Water treatment plant  on May 1st when water massively overdosed with Sodium Silicofluoride was released into the public water supply.

About 4,000 homes are  believed to have received water containing 30mg/l fluoride. This level is nearly 40 times higher than the 0.8 mg/L  Qld Health advised in Nov 2008 was to be the level for water supplies in SE Qld.

Water with 30 mg/L fluoride ion is equivalent to 120 fluoride tablets per litre of water, or 30 fluoride tablets per  250 ml glass, yet the Premier has denied that there was a health risk.

Read more: WORST AUSTRALIAN FLUORIDE ACCIDENT

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