Rivers have become a regular feature in news headlines about the environment as they face a wide range of pressures from human activity. While wastewater often dominates these headlines, it represents only one part of a much bigger picture. Our rivers can be affected by many different pollutants and factors, each with its own sources, behaviours and potential impacts on wildlife and people. Understanding what these pollutants and other factors are, how they enter our waterways, and what levels are considered safe is an important step in protecting and restoring healthy river ecosystems.
What are they?
PFAS (per‑ and polyfluoroalkyl substances), also known as ‘forever chemicals’, are a group of thousands of human‑made chemicals used since the 1940s for their water, oil and heat resistant properties.
They are found in products ranging from non‑stick cookware and waterproof clothing to firefighting foams, medical devices and industrial processes. The strong carbon‑fluorine bonds they possess make them extremely resistant to breakdown, earning them this name of ‘forever chemicals’ because they persist in the environment for decades or even centuries. Monitoring by the Environment Agency shows PFAS are now widely prevalent in English rivers, estuaries and groundwater, with at least ten PFAS compounds regularly detected in surface waters.
PFAS can enter rivers through multiple pathways, including:
• Industrial and manufacturing sites – historical and ongoing releases from chemical plants, metal plating, textiles and electronics
• Firefighting foams – especially from training grounds, airports and military sites
• Wastewater treatment works – PFAS pass through most treatment processes unchanged and are discharged into receiving rivers
• Urban runoff – household products, cosmetics, food packaging and textiles often wash into drainage systems
• Landfill leaching – PFAS migrate from waste sites into groundwater and surface waters
• Atmospheric deposition – PFAS can travel long distances before settling into soils and rivers
Because PFAS are so persistent and mobile, even remote rivers far from industrial sources can show contamination.

Wickham Mill Bridge over the River Blackwater by Robin Webster
What are the impacts?
PFAS pose a significant challenge as they affect rivers, wildlife and human health in multiple interconnected ways.
For example, they accumulate in aquatic organisms, moving up food webs and persisting for years with some studies in the UK detecting PFAS in freshwater fish, estuarine sediments and even otters, suggesting widespread exposure. Their persistence and ‘forever chemical’ nature means that once PFAS enter a river system, they can remain for generations, continually cycling between water, sediment and biota. Negative effects of this include bioaccumulation and biomagnification in predators, such as fish-eating birds and mammals, impacts on growth/reproduction/immune function in aquatic organisms and long-term contamination of sediments.
In addition, PFAS can enter our drinking water supplies if contaminated rivers or groundwater are used as sources. Monitoring of this shows that PFAS are already present in many UK water bodies, including aquifers and reservoirs.
Unlike many of the other pollutants covered through this series of articles, PFAS present unique challenges as they:
- do not degrade naturally
- are highly mobile and can spread through water, soil and air
- bind weakly to sediments, enabling them to travel great distances
- exist in thousands of different forms, most of which are not routinely monitored for
This makes PFAS one of the most complex emerging pollutants that rivers face.
Since PFAS come from multiple sources and persist for decades, no single intervention is sufficient. Solutions at the catchment-scale are required to address this issue, such as:
• reduction at the PFAS source – phasing out non‑essential uses in products such as firefighting foams, textiles and food packaging
• improvement of industrial controls – stricter permitting, monitoring and treatment at high‑risk sites
• upgrading wastewater treatment – advanced technologies such as activated carbon, ion‑exchange resins and high‑pressure membranes can remove PFAS, although costly
