WMRR COMMENDS NSW PFAS
INQUIRY FINDINGS: URGENT NATIONAL SOURCE
CONTROLS NEEDED
11 September 2025
The
Waste Management & Resource Recovery Association (WMRR) today welcomes the
report of the NSW Select Committee on PFAS Contamination in Waterways andDrinking Water Supplies.
The
inquiry has made clear what the WARR industry and WMRR has long known: the
waste industry cannot resolve PFAS contamination at the end of the pipe. The
only genuinely effective path forward is preventing PFAS from entering water
systems in the first place.
During
hearings, witnesses—including water utilities, the waste industry and local
councils—consistently emphasised the “urgent need to stop PFAS chemicals at the
source.”
Importantly,
at section 3.144 of its report, the Committee explicitly recognised that while
environmental protection licences could include discharge limits, evidence from
industry highlighted the practical impossibility of this approach. PFAS is
ubiquitous across industrial, commercial, and consumer products. For
end-of-pipe receivers—whether waste facilities or treatment plants—policing
PFAS load limits is extraordinarily difficult, and treatment is prohibitively
costly. The Committee agreed that the focus must shift upstream to source
control.
“This
report validates what our members have been saying for years: PFAS is not a
problem that can be solved at the end of the pipe,” said WMRR's CEO, Gayle
Sloan.
“Waste
facilities and treatment plants cannot—and should not—be expected to police
PFAS contamination across society. The Committee is right—the only effective
solution is source control. Australia needs urgent national leadership to phase
out non-essential PFAS by 2030 and ensure consistent regulations across
jurisdictions.”
PFAS
compounds are found in everyday items, from non-stick cookware, sunscreen, and
cosmetics to pizza boxes, packaging, and dental floss. Once they enter the
environment, they are persistent, mobile, and costly to remove. Attempting to
“clean up” PFAS after it reaches drains or waterways is a herculean and
unsustainable burden for utilities, councils, and industry.
WMRR
strongly supports the Committee’s recommendation that the NSW Government work
with state and federal counterparts to phase out all non-essential PFAS uses by
2030. This is consistent with international moves to restrict PFAS, including
bans on the most harmful compounds - PFOA, PFOS, and PFHxS.
Crucially,
WMRR also welcomes the Committee’s recommendation for mandatory consumer
labelling of PFAS-containing products. This would enable households,
businesses, and councils to make informed choices and reduce PFAS inputs at the
source. Labelling is a practical and transparent step to help communities
understand where PFAS is present and play their part in minimising its release
into the environment.
WMRR remains committed to working with governments,
industry, and communities to ensure that PFAS is addressed where it begins, not
where it ends