
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


New EPA data shows PFAS, short for per-and polyfluroalkyl, is showing up in 200 more drinking systems nationwide, including in Durham and Fayetteville. Those chemicals, known as "forever chemicals" because of how hard they are to break down, can cause health issues. WRAL Climate Change Reporter Liz McLaughlin digs into how utilities are responding and if their efforts are paying off.
By WRAL News | Raleigh, North Carolina4.2
1919 ratings
New EPA data shows PFAS, short for per-and polyfluroalkyl, is showing up in 200 more drinking systems nationwide, including in Durham and Fayetteville. Those chemicals, known as "forever chemicals" because of how hard they are to break down, can cause health issues. WRAL Climate Change Reporter Liz McLaughlin digs into how utilities are responding and if their efforts are paying off.

38,482 Listeners

6,715 Listeners

37,456 Listeners

43,557 Listeners

38,789 Listeners

8,705 Listeners

8,288 Listeners

87,159 Listeners

112,433 Listeners

25 Listeners

5,113 Listeners

10 Listeners

129 Listeners

269 Listeners

16,239 Listeners

77 Listeners

13 Listeners

36 Listeners

23 Listeners

6,357 Listeners

97 Listeners

72 Listeners

1 Listeners

1,223 Listeners

15 Listeners

1,158 Listeners

8 Listeners

17 Listeners

3 Listeners

4 Listeners

9 Listeners

10 Listeners

28 Listeners

32 Listeners