Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
detox · Detox for environmental illnesses
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want to share photos of your group with the world? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Fwd: Canaries in the Kitchen:  Teflon Toxicosis   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #880 of 2499 |


Thu Apr 14, 2005 7:42 am

cherielj@...
Send Email Send Email


header graphic

report logo

 

Executive summary

Teflon kills birds

An agonizing death

Few birds are saved

DuPont has known for 50 years

Heated pans get toxic in minutes

Teflon can't stand the heat

Teflon offgas studies

DuPont spin

The government fails to study Teflon

Bird death diaries

Tips for bird owners & the rest of us

Tips on safe cookware

EWG petition to CPSC (PDF)


Disclaimer: Teflon® is a registered trademark of DuPont Chemical Company. DuPont Chemical Company does not sponsor or endorse this report.

 

 

Printable Version of This Page

 

Search EWG

Provided by Google

 

 

 

Executive Summary

teflon on stoves reaches dangerous levels graphic


In two to five minutes on a conventional stovetop, cookware coated with Teflon and other non-stick surfaces can exceed temperatures at which the coating breaks apart and emits toxic particles and gases linked to hundreds, perhaps thousands, of pet bird deaths and an unknown number of human illnesses each year, according to tests commissioned by Environmental Working Group (EWG).

In new tests conducted by a university food safety professor, a generic non-stick frying pan preheated on a conventional, electric stovetop burner reached 736°F in three minutes and 20 seconds, with temperatures still rising when the tests were terminated. A Teflon pan reached 721°F in just five minutes under the same test conditions (See Figure 1), as measured by a commercially available infrared thermometer. DuPont studies show that the Teflon offgases toxic particulates at 446°F. At 680°F Teflon pans release at least six toxic gases, including two carcinogens, two global pollutants, and MFA, a chemical lethal to humans at low doses. At temperatures that DuPont scientists claim are reached on stovetop drip pans (1000°F), non-stick coatings break down to a chemical warfare agent known as PFIB, and a chemical analog of the WWII nerve gas phosgene.

For the past fifty years DuPont has claimed that their Teflon coatings do not emit hazardous chemicals through normal use. In a recent press release, DuPont wrote that "significant decomposition of the coating will occur only when temperatures exceed about 660 degrees F (340 degrees C). These temperatures alone are well above the normal cooking range."

These new tests show that cookware exceeds these temperatures and turns toxic through the common act of preheating a pan, on a burner set on high.

thumbnail graphic

In cases of "Teflon toxicosis," as the bird poisonings are called, the lungs of exposed birds hemorrhage and fill with fluid, leading to suffocation. DuPont acknowledges that the fumes can also sicken people, a condition called "polymer fume fever." DuPont has never studied the incidence of the fever among users of the billions of non-stick pots and pans sold around the world. Neither has the company studied the long-term effects from the sickness, or the extent to which Teflon exposures lead to human illnesses believed erroneously to be the common flu.

The government has not assessed the safety of non-stick cookware. According to a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) food safety scientist: "You won't find a regulation anywhere on the books that specifically addresses cookwares," although the FDA approved Teflon for contact with food in 1960 based on a food frying study that found higher levels of Teflon chemicals in hamburger cooked on heat-aged and old pans. At the time, FDA judged these levels to be of little health significance.

Of the 6.9 million bird-owning households in the US that claim an estimated 19 million pet birds, many don't know know that Teflon poses an acute hazard to birds. Most non-stick cookware carries no warning label. DuPont publicly acknowledges that Teflon can kill birds, but the company-produced public service brochure on bird safety discusses the hazards of ceiling fans, mirrors, toilets, and cats before mentioning the dangers of Teflon fumes.

As a result of the new data showing that non-stick surfaces reach toxic temperatures in a matter of minutes, EWG has petitioned the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to require that cookware and heated appliances bearing non-stick coatings must carry a label warning of the acute hazard the coating poses to pet birds. Additionally, we recommend that bird owners completely avoid cookware and heated appliances with non-stick coatings. Alternative cookware includes stainless steel and cast iron, neither of which offgases persistent pollutants that kill birds.



Next: Teflon kills birds



stattrax.com

 



Support EWG - Donate Now


Thu Apr 14, 2005 2:36 am

diane501@...
Send Email Send Email
Attachment
header_global.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
globalnavigation.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
graypixel.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
logo_teflonbirds2.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
Teflon-Electric4.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
thumb_thermo.gif
Type:
image/gif
Attachment
stattrax.cgi?a=7661&p=2251&g=1&r=
Type:
application/octet-stream
Attachment
stattrax.cgi?a=7661&p=2251&g=1
Type:
application/octet-stream
Attachment
button_supportEWG.gif
Type:
image/gif
Forward
Message #880 of 2499 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

-- Quick Index --HomeAsbestosArsenic/WoodBodyBurdenCosmeticsFarm SubsidiesFarmed SalmonFlame Retardants (PBDEs)Mercury/SeafoodMining/Oil & GasNuclear...
cherielj@...
Send Email
Apr 14, 2005
7:42 am
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help