Skip to content
Environment, Science

PFAS guidelines: UNSW expert available for comment

UNSW Sydney 2 mins read

UNSW expert available for comment on new PFAS guidelines

 

The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) has today announced proposals to update their guidelines for PFAS in drinking water.

Professor Denis O’Carroll, managing director of the UNSW Water Research Laboratory, recently led an led an international study which showed that much of our global source water exceeds PFAS safe drinking limits.

He said of the new NHMRC guidelines:

"PFAS constitute a class of over 14,000 chemicals that have been extensively used in industrial applications and consumer products around the world and are a serious health concern.

"For example, the World Health Organization lists perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) as a Group 1 carcinogen and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) as a Group 2B carcinogen.

"The Australian government should consider inclusion of a wider range of PFAS in the drinking water guidelines, as is common in a number of other countries.

"International organisations (eg the European Union and the US Centers for Disease Control) have serious health concerns about a much wider range of PFAS than those subject to Australian guidelines.

"These new proposed drinking water guidelines for Australia are much less stringent than those of the European Union, the United States and Canada.

"The new Australian drinking water guidelines do not include all PFAS on the Stockholm Convention list, which are in place for the protection of human health and the environment from persistent organic pollutants (POPs).

"In a study led by UNSW earlier this year, and published in Nature Geoscience, we found that PFAS levels in many of our international drinking source water exceeds drinking water guidance levels and that international guidance is much more stringent than Australia.

"Much more work is required to map out PFAS contamination in Australian source waters, and the government urgently needs to take a range of action.

"These include funding research to better understand the health and ecosystem risks posed by a wide range of PFAS; improve our understanding of the environmental fate of PFAS; and develop cost effective PFAS drinking water technologies."

 

For more information or to speak further with Prof. O'Carroll, please contact:

Professor Denis O'Carroll - 0448258831

Neil Martin, UNSW News & Content Coordinator - [email protected] 

 

NOTE:

The NHMRC has proposed updating their drinking water guidelines, suggesting an acceptable level of:

• 200ng/L for perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA)

• 4ng/L for perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS)

• 30ng/L for perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS)

• 1000ng/L for perfluorobutane sulfonic acid (PFBS)

 


Key Facts:

Comment available from Professor Denis O’Carroll, managing director of the UNSW Water Research Laboratory, regarding new NHMRC guidelines on PFAS in drinking water.


Contact details:

Professor Denis O'Carroll - 0448258831

Neil Martin, UNSW News & Content Coordinator - [email protected]

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 16/03/2026
  • 07:02
The Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand (TSANZ)

Respiratory Health Priorities Spotlighted at TSANZSRS ASM 2026

Key Facts: · TSANZSRS Annual Scientific Meeting 2026 in Perth to address key respiratory health priorities, including environmental threats, AI advances and new lung testing standards · Growing concerns about airborne microplastics' impact on respiratory health to be explored by leading researchers · Artificial intelligence and digital twin technologies are transforming respiratory research and treatment approaches · Updates to national spirometry and training standards will be presentedPerth, March 2026 – Emerging environmental threats, advances in artificial intelligence and new national standards for lung testing will be among the major respiratory health priorities discussed at the TSANZSRS Annual Scientific Meeting (ASM)…

  • Contains:
  • Environment
  • 16/03/2026
  • 06:13
WinDC

WinDC and Armada Join Forces to Turn Australia’s Renewable Energy Advantage into a Global AI Hub

Australia’s first portable AI factory has arrived in Australia, built on clean energy that the national grid cannot absorb and positioned to attract global technology investment to Australian soil SYDNEY & SAN FRANCISCO--BUSINESS WIRE-- WinDC today announced a strategic partnership with Armada to deploy Australia’s first network of portable AI factories powered by renewable energy. The partnership is designed to position Australia as a destination for global technology investment, using the country’s vast clean energy resources to power AI computing infrastructure that the world’s biggest technology companies are actively looking to build. The first unit is already on Australian soil.…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, General News
  • 16/03/2026
  • 01:00
Sustainable Population Australia

Population sustainability advocate Paul Ehrlich, co-author of ‘The Population Bomb’, dies at 93

Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) is mourning the death of Paul Ehrlich, aged 93, co-author with his wife Anne of the 1968 seminal book The Population Bomb. Dr Paul R Ehrlich was former Professor Emeritus ofPopulation Studiesat Stanford University’s Department of Biology. Ehrlich was a panellist on the ABC program ‘QandA’ in 2015, advocating on behalf of a sustainable population. SPA patrons Bob Carr and Tim Flannery were also past panellists on the program. SPA experts are available for further comment Peter Strachan – National President, Sustainable Population Australia Email: [email protected]: 0412 400 952 (available after 06:30am AWST) Quotes attributable to…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.