Iowa environmental researchers push back on clean water claims

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According to a news story from Public News Service, the Iowa Farm Bureau has released a statement claiming that the state’s waterways are becoming cleaner, despite evidence that nitrates and phosphates are higher than ever. The chemicals are dangerous to human health. The Iowa Farm Bureau blames seasonal waterflow fluctuations for nutrient spikes in Iowa waterways, claiming nitrate levels have not exceeded EPA safety levels of 10 micrograms per milliliter of water. But the Iowa Environmental Council’s Michael Schmidt says research shows that levels are often higher than that, and adds that nitrate is dangerous at levels as low as 5 micrograms. 

“The drinking water standards set by EPA many years ago, decades ago, was really set to protect against short-term acute impacts. So, babies drinking formula made with water high in nitrates would get sick with blue baby syndrome”

Schmidt says Iowa’s nitrate pollution is not short-term, but continuous, and has been linked to cancer in a state with the nation’s second highest number of new cases. Environmental groups have called on the EPA to tighten nitrate level safety standards in Iowa waterways. 

Schmidt says large animal confinement operations are the primary source of nitrates and phosphorous pollution in Iowa waterways, and adds that beyond cancer, the chemicals can cause birth defects. 

“A study of mothers in Iowa found that increased nitrates in drinking water was associated with neural tube defects of the brain and spinal cord and potentially even limb deficiencies”

Schmidt says there is also evidence that high nitrate levels in drinking water can cause thyroid disease. The Farm Bureau says it is working with scientists at Iowa State University to more accurately track waterway nutrients levels in real time.

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