Companies making products with PFAS should prepare for litigation, boycotts, and increased governmental oversight as the trickle of current public information about their products becomes a flood later this year.
The information deluge expected by September results from Minnesota’s “Amara’s Law,” a provision of a broader 2023 environmental law. Then, a similar requirement kicks in due to the PFAS Protection Act that became a New Mexico law in 2025.
In addition to banning over time the sale of products with nonessential uses of PFAS, both laws have consumer right-to-know provisions requiring manufacturers to provide details to state regulators ...
