Maine Revises PFAS in Products Legislation

Maine’s reporting requirements for products containing PFAS will be narrowed, and incremental category-specific bans will be adopted under a new law enacted April 16, 2024.  The law, LD 1537, revises landmark 2021 legislation that implemented a general ban on the sale of products containing intentionally added PFAS starting in 2030 and mandated reporting in the interim.

Narrowed reporting requirements

The new law scraps the old law’s “general notification requirement,” which would have required manufacturers to report information on products containing intentionally added PFAS by January 1, 2023 (later delayed to 2025).  Under LD 1537, reporting will only be required for “currently unavoidable uses” beginning in 2032.

As was the case previously, Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection will be tasked with determining what uses are currently unavoidable.  The department solicited requests for proposals from manufacturers seeking currently unavoidable use determinations beginning in January of this year.  However, in light of the new law, the department says on its website that it anticipates currently unavoidable use determinations to begin in 2025.

New timeline for banned products

LD 1537 pushes back the general sales prohibition for products containing intentionally added PFAS from 2030 to 2032.  However, the new law introduces many product category-specific bans.  Certain categories will now be subject to more aggressive deadlines, and a few will not be banned until 2040.

The new sales bans for products containing intentionally added PFAS are as follows:

  • Effective January 1, 2026: cleaning products, cookware, cosmetics, dental floss, juvenile products, menstruation products, textile articles (excluding outdoor apparel for extreme wet conditions and textiles for watercraft, aircraft, or motor vehicles), ski wax, and upholstered furniture.
  • Effective January 1, 2029: artificial turf and outdoor apparel for severe wet conditions (unless it includes a PFAS disclosure).
  • Effective January 1, 2032: all other products containing intentionally added PFAS except for currently unavoidable uses and those subject to a ban in 2040.
  • Effective January 1, 2040: HVAC equipment, refrigeration equipment, refrigerants, foams, and aerosol propellants.

LD 1537 additionally excludes certain product categories from all requirements, including firefighting foams, medical devices/drugs, veterinary products, motor vehicles/motor vehicle equipment, watercraft, and semiconductors.

Other changes

Under the new law, products that do not contain intentionally added PFAS are still subject to the above bans if they are sold in a container that contains intentionally added PFAS.  Importantly, this includes fluorinated containers.

LD 1537 also increases the minimum number of employees for a manufacturer to be subject to reporting requirements from 26 to 101.

More information on LD 1537 can be found at Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection website.