Australia sues 3M for $1.4 billion over PFAS contamination
The Australian government has initiated a lawsuit against 3M, seeking damages related to contamination from PFAS chemicals. This marks the largest legal claim ever filed by the government. (sources: cbsnews, nytimes, theguardian, bbc, reuters)

Australia is suing 3M for over $2 billion Australian dollars ($1.4 billion) due to contamination from PFAS chemicals used in firefighting foam at defense bases. The lawsuit alleges that 3M concealed information about the harmful effects of these chemicals.
- The lawsuit is the largest ever filed by the Australian government.
- The claim involves contamination from PFAS chemicals at military sites.
- The government alleges that 3M hid information regarding the dangers of PFAS.
Why it matters
The outcome of this lawsuit could have significant implications for environmental accountability and public health related to chemical contamination.
↓ Congress can act on this
3 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is HR6626: PFAS Accountability Act of 2025.
HR6626 · 119th Congress
PFAS Accountability Act of 2025
Where do you stand on this bill?
Takes about 60 seconds
About this bill
What HR6626 actually does
This story is about Australia sues 3M for $1.4 billion over PFAS contamination. This bill would Create a federal PFAS-related cause of action under TSCA for significantly exposed individuals.
If passed, it would:
- Create a federal PFAS-related cause of action under TSCA for significantly exposed individuals • Authorize a medical-monitoring type remedy tied to PFAS exposure.
2 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about Australia sues 3M for $1.4 billion over PFAS contamination. This bill would Establish PFAS-related effluent limitations guidelines/standards under the Clean Water Act.
If passed, it would
- Establish PFAS-related effluent limitations guidelines/standards under the Clean Water Act • Establish PFAS water quality criteria under the Clean Water Act.
This story is about Australia sues 3M for $1.4 billion over PFAS contamination. This bill would Big PFAS liability fights often revolve around the scale of harm and cleanup needed; this bill would lock in national drinking-water limits.
If passed, it would
- Codify EPA’s PFAS national primary drinking water regulation as law (as referenced in the bill text • Reduce regulatory uncertainty around enforceable drinking-water PFAS standards.
Top coverage · 6 sources
