Byย Willy Blackmore
(WIB) – Formaldehyde is one of those chemicals that is absolutely everywhere. Naturally occurring in timber products, itโs also used for its preservative properties in other building materials, house goods,ย beauty productsย (includingย chemical hair relaxers), automotive parts, fertilizers, embalmingโฆreally, the list goes on and on.ย
But the bottom line is that formaldehyde is a carcinogen that most people encounter in their daily lives. And yet for even such a widespread chemical pollutant, Black people are often exposed to formaldehyde at higher rates than white people are โ and itโs now the latest target for a regulatory rollback from the Trump Administration.
The EPAโs Convenient New Theory
Such a move has been expected since the beginning of the second Trump Administration, and earlier this month, the Environmental Protection Agency published a draft memo that operates under the assumption that thereโs a safe level of formaldehyde exposure โ something that has never been established scientifically.
The draft regulation would roughly double the allowable exposure level established by the Biden Administration. Formaldehyde causes more cancers than any other air pollutant โ 77 cases for every 1 million people โ and can create other respiratory issues, too.
Black residents breathed air with 7% higher concentrations than white residents.
The widespread use of formaldehyde does make it more of a challenge to control exposure levels. But by the same measure, formaldehyde is everywhere. And because there are both indoor and outdoor sources of formaldehyde, there are two major avenues for exposure to occur.
And while indoor levels are relatively consistent among socioeconomic groups, things look different for outside exposure, which can be significantly higher in some urban areas that have freeways and/or factories.
A study of Beaumont, Texas, a city near Houston that is about half Black, found that Black residents breathed air with 7% higher concentrations than white residents, with 44% of the formaldehyde coming from the local refinery and other industrial sources. White people living in the area had lower exposure simply because they lived further away from the sources of formaldehyde emissions.
A Test Case
While the change to formaldehyde regulations is cause for concern in and of itself, many see the approach Trumpโs EPA is taking as the first step in a larger shift in how chemicals are regulated.
The chemical industry pushes for safe levels of exposure in regulations, even if they donโt exist, so that thereโs a range of pollution that they donโt have to address, David Michaels, an epidemiology professor at the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University, explained to The New York Times.
โItโs a signal of the approach that E.P.A. will take and has consequences for other carcinogens,โ he said. โItโs antithetical to the rhetoric of โMake America Healthy Again.โ This will do the opposite.โ
Itโs no exaggeration to say that this change is just what the chemical industry wants: the top two people in the EPA department that regulates chemical safety joined the agency after working as higher-ups at the American Chemistry Council, the industryโs leading trade association.
