
Chemours will pay $22.5M in penalties and spend $450M on pollution controls and clean water under the first federal PFAS enforcement settlement.
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The Trump administration reached a multi-state settlement with Chemours Co. over illegal discharges of synthetic "forever chemicals" used in water- and stain-resistant products. It is the first federal enforcement settlement against a manufacturer of PFAS compounds.
Chemours will pay a $22.5 million civil penalty and spend $90 million over 15 years to mitigate PFAS discharges in West Virginia, North Carolina and New Jersey, according to the agreement filed in federal court in West Virginia. The company also agreed to install pollution controls at a West Virginia facility at an estimated cost of $60 million, supply clean drinking water to communities near its West Virginia and New Jersey sites at an estimated cost of $280 million, and implement controls to reduce releases at its North Carolina facility based on a pending independent assessment.
Combined, the penalties and relief programs are estimated to cost at least $450 million, the Justice Department said.
The settlement allows Chemours to continue manufacturing PFAS for commercial and military applications while preventing future contamination and protecting communities from existing pollution, said Adam Gustafson, principal deputy assistant attorney general for the Environment and Natural Resources Division.
"The Trump administration recognizes the important role of Chemours for its commercial and military obligations," Gustafson said in an interview. "The settlement protects public health while preserving that important balance."
The settlement against a major PFAS manufacturer "delivers on the Trump administration's promise to make polluters pay and stop PFAS contamination at the source," said Jeffrey Hall, assistant EPA administrator for enforcement and compliance assurance.
The agreement will greatly reduce PFAS contamination of water, land and air and even begin to mitigate past harm, Hall said. "This settlement brings Chemours into compliance with the law and holds it fully accountable," he said.
In a statement Wednesday, Chemours said it has already begun planning and implementing operational improvements at its facilities and will take steps to mitigate future emissions and enhance existing programs.
"This settlement provides Chemours with greater clarity on future compliance requirements and actions to support long-term responsible manufacturing," spokeswoman Jess Loizeaux said.
The settlement comes as the Trump administration is expected to propose softening Biden-era limits on "forever chemicals" in drinking water, while delaying tough standards for two common types of the substance. The proposal will start the formal process of rolling back parts of the first-ever limits on PFAS in drinking water finalized during former President Joe Biden's administration. Officials at the time found they increased the risk of cardiovascular disease, certain cancers and babies being born with low birth weight.
The agency is committed to addressing PFAS in drinking water while following the law and ensuring that regulatory compliance is achievable for drinking water systems, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said.
The settlement determined that facilities Chemours operates in the three states have discharged PFAS into the Ohio River, Cape Fear River and Delaware River, respectively, in violation of permits required by the Clean Water Act and state laws. Chemours also violated legal requirements under the federal Toxic Substances Control Act at all three facilities.
As a result of the alleged violations, people living near the facilities were exposed to illegal PFAS, officials said. PFAS are widely used and found around the world, with scientific studies showing that exposure to some PFAS in the environment may be linked to harmful health effects in humans and animals.
The violations continued for over a decade, the Justice Department said. The facilities were previously owned for many decades by DuPont. The settlement announced Wednesday does not resolve DuPont's liability for past PFAS violations, officials said.
A federal judge last year ordered Chemours to stop discharging unlawful levels of cancer-causing chemicals into the Ohio River from the company's Washington Works plant in West Virginia. The pollutants endanger the environment, aquatic life and human health, U.S. District Judge Joseph Goodwin wrote in the August 2025 order.
The West Virginia Rivers Coalition had asked Goodwin to require the company to immediately comply with its permit limits after violating them for more than five years.
DuPont, Chemours and another company, Corteva, agreed to pay New Jersey up to $2 billion last year to settle environmental claims stemming from PFAS. The federal settlement does not affect the state case.
North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson called the settlement "an insult to the people of eastern North Carolina."
His state is "ground zero for GenX contamination, this deal does practically nothing to clean up our water," said Jackson, a Democrat. GenX is a trade name for a synthetic chemical developed by Chemours as an alternative to PFAS which has raised significant health and environmental concerns in its own right.
"Chemours made this mess, and Chemours should clean it up," Jackson said in a statement.
The federal consent decree calls for 14 specific treatment systems to reduce PFAS in wastewater, stormwater and groundwater from the West Virginia plant. Chemours will test drinking water near the West Virginia and New Jersey sites and provide treated or alternative clean water.
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