Today: 15 June 2026
3M Company PFAS Risk Returns As Wisconsin Greystone Tests Draw New Scrutiny
3 May 2026
3 mins read

3M Company PFAS Risk Returns As Wisconsin Greystone Tests Draw New Scrutiny

WAUSAU, Wisconsin, May 2, 2026, 17:07 (CDT)

  • This week, local reports brought renewed focus to PFAS contamination allegations linked to 3M’s Greystone Facility and the nearby Quarry outside Wausau.
  • 3M lists $7.8 billion under “other environmental liabilities”—the bulk linked to PFAS issues.
  • 3M shares finished Friday at $142.50, slipping 2.7% before the weekend market closure.

3M Company is under fresh fire in Wisconsin, with local reporting pointing to testing that found PFAS levels at its Greystone site soaring hundreds of times over the state’s proposed threshold. Residents living nearby have been invited to an information session this Saturday, tied to a lawsuit over the contamination.

It’s a tough stretch for 3M. While the company tries to spotlight margin improvements and its outlook for 2026, PFAS — those so-called “forever chemicals” that just don’t break down — continues to cloud the picture. The legal and cash-flow risks tied to PFAS aren’t getting any lighter. As of March 31, 3M reported $7.8 billion in other environmental liabilities, inching up from $7.7 billion at the end of last year, according to its first-quarter filing. 3M Company

The Wisconsin case has been around for a while, but it’s picking up pace. According to WSAW, residents in the Village of Maine got invites to a Saturday town hall over a class action suit that claims 3M dumped PFAS-laced roofing materials at the Greystone Facility and Quarry—contamination that allegedly made its way into local private wells. Lawyers planned to be on hand at the Bantr Hotel in Rothschild, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

3M disclosed to investors that back in August 2024, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency requested details on PFAS handling and disposal at both the Greystone facility and the downtown Wausau location. According to 3M, by October 2025, the EPA had responded that it hadn’t found any immediate need for further action. Wisconsin regulators, however, concluded that hazardous substances had been released from Greystone, signed off on a site investigation plan, and by January had gotten initial sampling results.

Private well owners living near the Wausau Greystone quarry sued in December 2024, pushing for property damages and medical monitoring costs over alleged PFAS contamination. 3M did get a partial win in March when the court trimmed several claims, but discovery is still moving ahead. Plaintiffs have until July 24, 2026, to file for class certification. Trial’s penciled in for November 2027.

3M has wrapped up its PFAS manufacturing exit, sticking to its end-of-2025 timeline. The company says it’s still on the hook for handling PFAS produced prior to the phaseout, covering water treatment and cleaning up leftover waste at sites that used to make the chemicals.

3M’s numbers outshine its legal challenges. The company posted $6.0 billion in first-quarter sales and adjusted earnings of $2.14 per share, with an adjusted operating margin of 23.8%, all reported on April 21. Management is sticking with its full-year 2026 adjusted earnings outlook of $8.50 to $8.70 a share. Chief Executive William Brown described the quarter as “a good start to the year” and referenced process simplification, portfolio moves, and cash returned to shareholders. 3M Company

Pressure isn’t letting up at 3M. After earnings, Reuters reported the company flagged a $125 million annual hit tied to rising oil prices. Chief Financial Officer Anurag Maheshwari pointed out that their own moves “more than offset” about $145 million in tariffs, costs and investments last quarter. Maheshwari also told analysts that earnings per share would likely come in stronger in the first half than the second, citing contingencies expected later this year. Reuters

The PFAS legal battles stretch far beyond just 3M. In its latest quarterly update, 3M disclosed that other companies—DuPont and Chemours among them—show up as co-defendants in some lawsuits tied to the chemicals. There’s also exposure for manufacturers in carpets, paper, and textiles. Still, 3M’s own production legacy and its track record with settlements keep the company firmly in the spotlight.

Sizing up the downside proves tricky. 3M flagged the risk that shifting regulatory standards may drive up costs for investigations, cleanup, and lawsuits. The company said it’s unable to gauge potential losses beyond what’s already set aside for PFAS-related environmental issues. So, investors get a more focused operating business than before, but unresolved legal exposure still hangs over the company.

3M shares finished Friday at $142.50, leaving the company with a market cap near $75.4 billion, market data showed. Friday’s trading reflected investors sizing up new local PFAS scrutiny alongside 3M’s cost-cutting, share repurchases, and steady 2026 guidance.

Legal milestones are coming up: Wisconsin DNR continues to weigh in on Greystone, the Wausau private-well case faces a July class-certification deadline, and a hearing on 3M’s proposed PFAS settlement in New Jersey looms in June 2026. Brown keeps those on his radar, alongside factory numbers, pricing, and demand. This isn’t just a turnaround—cleanup’s still front and center.

Stock Market Today

  • Japan and South Korea Stocks Surge on US-Iran Framework Agreement
    June 14, 2026, 10:36 PM EDT. Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 4.6% and South Korea's KOSPI gained 5.8% after the U.S. and Iran agreed to a framework deal that includes reopening the strategic Strait of Hormuz. This easing of geopolitical tensions lifted investor sentiment, driving stock gains. Brent crude oil prices fell 4.2% to $83.60 a barrel, reflecting expectations of restored oil shipment routes through the Strait, a key passage for Gulf oil and liquefied natural gas exports. The agreement, announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, aims for full reopening of the waterway after a formal deal signing on Friday, which has boosted market confidence in energy supply stability.

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