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Brominated Flame Retardants vs Calcium Disodium EDTA: which is worse?

Quick answer: Brominated Flame Retardants carries the heavier risk profile. Brominated Flame Retardants is in the EU and in the US; Calcium Disodium EDTA is in the EU and in the US.

PropertyBrominated Flame RetardantsCalcium Disodium EDTA
EU status
US status
Risk level
Banned inEuropean Union (PBDEs banned since 2003 under RoHS; HBCD banned globally under Stockholm Convention 2013), United States (EPA banned penta- and octa-BDE in 2004 under TSCA; deca-BDE phase-out)
Restricted inUnited States (EPA regulatory actions ongoing), Global Stockholm Convention (certain BFRs listed as POPs)European Union (restricted to specific food categories; not approved for many applications permitted in US)
Categoryadditiveadditive
Where it hides

What is Brominated Flame Retardants?

Brominated flame retardants (BFRs) are a class of synthetic chemicals added to consumer products and materials to reduce flammability. They include polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), hexabromocyclododecane (HBCD), and others. While not direct food additives, they contaminate the food supply through environmental pathways and food packaging.

What is Calcium Disodium EDTA?

Calcium disodium EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetate) is a chelating agent used as a food preservative. It binds metal ions (particularly iron and copper) that would otherwise catalyze oxidative and color-degradation reactions in foods. It prevents color loss, flavor changes, and bacterial growth in certain foods.

Documented risks

Brominated Flame Retardants: PBDEs and other BFRs are endocrine disruptors, neurodevelopmental toxicants, and probable carcinogens. They accumulate in human adipose tissue, breast milk, and blood. PBDEs were found in 100% of samples in multiple US population biomonitoring studies. US women have PBDE body burdens 10-100 times higher than European women, reflecting the US's historically heavy PBDE use before bans. Neurodevelopmental effects: multiple studies have associated prenatal PBDE exposure with lower IQ, attention deficits, and behavioral problems in children. A 2012 Environmental Health Perspectives study found inverse associations between PBDE cord blood levels and child IQ and behavioral outcomes. Thyroid disruption: BFRs structurally mimic thyroid hormones and compete with thyroid hormone binding proteins, disrupting the thyroid axis — critical for fetal brain development. Carcinogenicity: some PBDEs are associated with thyroid cancer risk in human studies. PBDEs enter the food supply primarily through fatty fish (salmon, tuna), meat, dairy, and some contaminated produce from biosolid-amended soils.

Calcium Disodium EDTA: EDTA chelates essential minerals including zinc, iron, calcium, and magnesium in the gut, potentially reducing absorption of these nutrients with regular consumption. Animal studies at high doses show reproductive toxicity and zinc deficiency effects. EFSA's safety assessment noted that EDTA could reduce zinc bioavailability at consumption levels that could be reached by high consumers of EDTA-containing foods. The ADI is 1.9 mg/kg body weight. EDTA's poor biodegradability also makes it an environmental concern — it accumulates in water supplies and can mobilize heavy metals in sediments.

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