Australia politics live: government sues manufacturer 3M over defence base Pfas contamination in ‘largest ever’ bn legal claim


Government launches ‘largest ever’ $2bn legal action against 3M over Pfas contamination

The government is seeking $2bn in damages from 3M to recover costs relating to Pfas “forever chemicals” in firefighting foam at 28 defence bases across Australia.

The attorney general, Michelle Rowland, says this is the largest legal claim ever brought by the government.

She says that 3M withheld information and misrepresented the effects of 3M’s aqueous film-forming foam.

At a press conference, Rowland claimed:

double quotation markThis misconduct has contributed to substantial costs for Defence and the Australian taxpayer, including over $1bn to date to investigate, remediate and mitigate Pfas contamination at Defence estate sites.

Make no mistake – this legal action against 3M is significant.

This is a government that is prepared to take on one of the biggest multinational corporations in the world for the betterment of Australian citizens.

Rowland says 3M withheld its own environmental laboratory testing, which showed “there was significant adverse environmental effects associated with the use of 3M firefighting foam” and represented that the foam could be safely disposed of, was biodegradable and not toxic.

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Federal police confirm another woman who arrived from Syrian camp has been charged

Federal police have charged a 34-year-old woman who returned to Australia from a Syrian camp in September 2025, for allegedly entering a declared conflict zone and joining ISIS.

Deputy Commissioner Hilda Sirec is providing updates at a press conference in Canberra.

She says that the woman will face charges of “entering or remaining in a declared area and being a member of a terrorist organisation.” Both offences carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

Sirec says that investigations are continuing on all the women who have recently arrived from the Al-Roj camp.

double quotation markIt will be alleged the woman travelled to Syria between 2013 and 2014 to join ISIS. The woman was detained by Kurdish forces in March 2019, and held with her other family members in an internally displaced persons camp. She returned to Australia on 26 September, 2025.

I will confirm investigations are continuing in all recent adult female returnees who spent time in internally displaced persons camps in Syria.

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