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PFAS-containing firefighting foam
Saturday, 16 May 2026 - 10:15

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Netherlands identifies 57 high-risk PFAS sites needing urgent cleanup

Dutch provinces and major municipalities have pinpointed 57 locations where PFAS contamination is so severe that immediate remediation is required due to major risks to human health and the environment, according to the first national inventory report released by the Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management.

Officials expect the number of these priority “PFAS attention locations” to increase significantly in the coming years, describing the current total as only the tip of the iceberg. According to NOS, full cleanup of the sites will take years and require substantial funding.

So far, authorities have identified roughly 4,000 potentially contaminated sites and selected nearly 600 for deeper investigation. The vast majority involve former or active industrial sites where PFAS were used in manufacturing, particularly in the carpet industry and in paper and cardboard factories.

Other hotspots include sites where PFAS-containing firefighting foam was deployed, such as fire brigade and Defense training areas, as well as landfills and waste processing facilities where PFAS-laden products are disposed of in large quantities.

PFAS refers to a large group of man-made chemicals that are highly persistent in the environment and linked to serious health effects, including damage to the immune system, reduced fertility, harm to unborn children, and problems with organs such as the liver and thyroid. The substances are also associated with cancer.

Only locations where soil testing has confirmed extremely high risk—for example, pollution near drinking water sources or residential neighborhoods—are classified as PFAS attention locations requiring urgent action.

The majority of the 57 identified sites are due to firefighting foam contamination. Cleanup operations have started at less than one-quarter of them.

A key obstacle slowing the nationwide effort is the inability of authorities to compel soil investigations. Many companies refuse to grant permission for testing, a barrier previously reported by the NOS. “The issue must be resolved,” the Interprovinciaal Overleg (IPO), the coordinating body for the provinces, stated.

State Secretary Bertram aims to have a much clearer overview by 2028 of how many high-priority PFAS sites exist and of the total cleanup bill. A coordinated national “programmatic approach” is scheduled to begin after 2030.

Provincial and municipal officials report they are struggling with limited staff and insufficient specialized knowledge to handle the complex issue. They are also deeply concerned about the financial burden. Ongoing remediation work has already cost at least 68 million euros, according to the IPO.

The provinces are calling on the national government to provide adequate funding. “In the first instance, the polluter or owner is responsible,” the spokesperson added. “However, there are situations in which the government will also have to contribute or even take the initiative for remediation.”

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