The UK Government has unveiled its first-ever PFAS Plan to better protect public health and the environment from harmful ‘forever chemicals.’ This strategy provides a coordinated framework for governments, businesses, and regulators to identify the sources of these chemicals, understand how they spread, and take steps to reduce exposure. While PFAS have supported economic growth and low-carbon technologies, their persistent nature has created long-term risks for both people and ecosystems.
Currently, there is no evidence of PFAS above permitted levels in England and Wales’ drinking water. The Plan includes a consultation later this year on introducing a statutory limit for PFAS in public water supply regulations, allowing regulators to act decisively if levels are exceeded. Environment Minister Emma Hardy emphasized that the initiative aims to reduce harmful effects while transitioning to safer alternatives, protecting public health and vital ecosystems for future generations.
The Plan also focuses on assessing the full extent of PFAS contamination in England’s estuaries and coastal waters for the first time. Through improved testing of water, sediment, and invertebrates, regulators will gain a clearer understanding of risks to these habitats and a stronger evidence base to guide future action. There is also a push to develop safer alternatives to everyday items, such as period products and water-repellent clothing, whose production currently emits high levels of PFAS.
Philip Duffy, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, highlighted the agency’s role in monitoring, risk assessment, and regulatory enforcement. The PFAS Plan outlines additional measures, including new guidance for regulators and industry on legacy contamination, testing food packaging for PFAS, enhancing transparency through a dedicated website, reducing industrial emissions, monitoring PFAS in soils, and reviewing restrictions on firefighting foams.
The UK Government will collaborate with regulators, businesses, and communities to implement the Plan, taking a science-based and proportionate approach to minimize the risks posed by PFAS to public health and the environment.







