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Wisconsin Soybean Farmers Fund Soyfoam Effort to Reduce Pfas in Firefighting Foam

BY COURTNEY EVERETT 

Could a soybean-based foam help extinguish fires and prevent toxic chemicals from seeping into Wisconsin waterways?

The Wisconsin Soybean Marketing Board certainly hopes so.

The board’s president, Pat Mullolly, recently visited Dalton, Georgia, to observe farmers and volunteer firefighters using a new soybean-based product called SoyFoam.

“It looked like the consistency of paint. It was a brown-type substance, maybe a little bit thicker than salt. They inject that into the water stream and it creates foam,” Mullolly said on WPR’s “The Morning Show.”

According to Mullolly, the biodegradable foam could eliminate the use of chemicals known as PFAS in firefighting foam. The chemicals have been linked by the U.S. Fire Administration to health risks and groundwater pollution.

“From what I’ve been told by those firefighters, SoyFoam performs just as well and doesn’t have the risk to the firefighters (or) risk to the environment,” Mullolly said.

Efforts to develop SoyFoam started in October 2022. Since then, Cross Plains Solutions in Dalton, Georgia, has worked with the United Soybean Board to create and produce firefighting foam for the mass market, Mullolly said.

The Wisconsin marketing board is contributing $125,000 to the research and development project, with some work being done at the Chippewa Valley Technical College in Eau Claire. The board receives funding from soybean sales and directs that money, through its Checkoff Program, to research that aims to support soybean farmers, Mullolly said.

“For every bushel of soybeans that is sold in the state of Wisconsin, half of 1 percent of that value is taken out,” Mullolly said. “Checkoff dollars are pulled out from that farmer’s check that he receives for those beans. Half of those funds stay in Wisconsin. The other half goes to the United Soybean Board, which is national.”

Although SoyFoam is early in development, Mullolly is hopeful the product as well as other ongoing state projects can grow Wisconsin’s agricultural economy.

“We’re investing in a project where we hire people to go out into tech schools to teach younger diesel mechanic students the benefits of biodiesel. We’ve invested in some projects at the Port of Milwaukee,” he said.

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How to fix a leaking pond.

Video: How to fix a leaking pond.

Does the pond leak? Ummmm....possibly a tiny bit. Well, more than a bit...ok, the darn thing leaks like a sieve!

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The specific polymer used for Damit is a trade secret, however, it has been closely scrutinized by multiple health and safety authorities. This includes the governmental authorities of Australia, the USA, Europe, and Asia. Not only have they determined that is safe to use in earthen ponds, and not harmful to fish, but it is considered safe to use in human potable water systems in all of these areas. And of course, they know the exact makeup of the polymer when making this determination. I'm told that the same polymer is in use by many municipalities to keep potable water storage tanks leak free. I can't tell you exactly what the polymer is, because I don't know, but given the confidence with which the governmental authorities have authorized its use, I would bet it is made of a monomer that we are exposed to all the time, like fructose or something.

It also breaks down in a matter of years, and does not accumulate in the environment. The end products of breaking down are CO2, water, and base minerals like potassium. The SDS reports no need for concern with ingestion, inhalation, or contact. If in eyes, rinse with water.

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