New Jersey PFAS Partnership Innovation Consortium (NJ PFAS-PIC)

The New Jersey PFAS Partnership Innovation Consortium (NJ PFAS-PIC) will establish a collaborative strategic stakeholders partnership based ecosystem to develop innovative technology solutions with advance translation, scaling and community validation to address critical needs in PFAS detection, remediation, decontamination and management, and develop novel alternative materials to be used in consumable products for reducing and managing PFAS contamination for societal benefits and economic impact.

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NEWS & EVENTS

PFAS Briefing: PFAS in 2025 – Regulatory Changes at the Federal and State Levels
Thursday, January 22, 2026: 12:00 - 1:00pm ET An ELI Public Webinar Staying on top of the legal and policy ...
WRF Seeks Pre-Proposals for High-Priority Utility Research
Receive up to $150,000 in Matching Funds (Denver, CO) 01/12/2026 – The Water Research Foundation (WRF) is now accepting pre-proposals ...
Peter Jaffé: Bioremediation of long-lasting contaminants
Researchers have discovered a bacterium that can biodegrade chemicals that are persistent in the environment and that may cause harmful ...
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NEWSLETTER & ANNOUNCEMENTS

Save The Date, CTR Workshop on Translational Research and Technology Innovations for PFAS Decontaminations
Sponsored by NSF ART (Accelerating Research Translation) Program at NJIT National Academy of Inventor (NAI) – NJIT Chapter Co-organizers and ...
CTR Workshop on Translational Research and Technology Innovations for PFAS Decontaminations
Tremendous collaborative synergy and industry-university-government-community engagement with more than 200 percipients and speakers from academia, NJ state legislature , businesses, ...
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Need

New Jersey faces significant challenges with PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances), often called “forever chemicals,” contamination in water, wastewater, soil, and the environment, posing serious health risks including increased cholesterol, liver damage, thyroid disease, changes in the immune system, and certain cancers. The state's densely populated regions and industrial history contribute to high PFAS levels. While New Jersey has regulations and is working to address the issue, the costs of monitoring, cleanup, and potential higher water rates for consumers are a concern for utilities and residents. Utilities face the burden of monitoring, reporting, and potentially cleaning up PFAS contamination, while also navigating the costs associated with these efforts. While New Jersey has regulations and is working to address the issue, the costs of monitoring, cleanup, and potential higher water rates for consumers are a concern for utilities and residents.

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Strategy

The New Jersey PFAS Partnership Innovation Consortium (NJ PFAS-PIC) will establish a collaborative strategic stakeholders partnerships based ecosystem to develop innovative technology solutions with advance translation, scaling and community validation to address critical needs in PFAS contamination detection, remediation, decontamination and management, and develop novel alternative materials to be used in consumable products for reducing and managing PFAS contaminations for societal benefits and economic impact. The collaborative partners with the consortium include academic researchers and innovators from NJIT, Princeton, Rutgers, Stevens and Rowan; industry leaders with potential participation from investor owned utilities and engineering firms - Veolia, AECOM, Langan, and T&M Associates; state government and regulatory agencies including NJDEP, NJEDA and NJCSIT; and public government run utilities companies and commissions - Ridgewood Water, Jersey Water Works and others. Additional expected partners to NJ PFAS-PIC include Revive, Allonia, American Water, Arcadis, Carollo, Resin Tech, Mott McDonald, Colliers, Passaic Valley Water Commission, , Atlantic County Utilities Authority, Brick Utilities., and consulting companies.

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Resources and Assets

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) is actively monitoring and testing water systems, wastewater, soil and environment for PFAS contamination. Academic researchers from 5 leading universities in NJ have innovated several advanced technologies for PFAS rapid detection, monitoring, decontamination and management but lack translational field validation and feasibility studies for meaningful deployment in communities with regulatory compliance and guidance from NJDEP, NJEDA, NJCSIT and EPA. In addition, there are technological and commercial assets available with global and regional industry having strong interest in collaborating with NJ universities, regulatory agencies and utility companies to test innovative technology solutions for scaling, compliance, and commercialization feasibility for effective deployment toward community benefits and economic gains.

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NJ PFAS-PIC Collaborators and Partners

More than 40 institutions, industry, utilities and state organizations have actively participated in the CTR PFAS Workshop. They are expected to provide commitments to continue developing collaborative synergy and partnerships for the proposed NJ PFAS-PIC through their direct involvement in the STRIP PFAS Focus Groups.

BACKGROUND

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances), often called “forever chemicals,” are found in everyday products and persist in water, wastewater, soil, and the environment, posing serious public health risks including increased cholesterol, liver damage, thyroid disease, and changes in the immune system.

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Early-Stage translational research & validation
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advanced translational research & technology development
Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book.
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Regulatory Policies & deployment framework
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STRATEGIC APPROACH AND INNOVATION

The proposed NJ PFAS Partnerships Innovation Consortium (NJ PFAS-PIC) will build on the tremendous collaborative synergy and commitment from all stakeholder groups to develop the university-industry-government-community ecosystem to focus on innovation translation to market and communities for technology validation, scaling, manufacturing, and adoption by the communities for greater societal and economic benefits. .

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Early-Stage Translational Research and Validation

Focused on identifying key PFAS contaminants, validating detection methods and developing translational pathways for remediation, decontamination and management technologies with early field validation.

Advanced Translational Research and Technology Development

Centered on piloting and preparing technologies for scaling and pre-commercialization readiness for deep-dive investments.

Regulatory Policies and Deployment Framework

Focused on bridging detection and technology validation with regulatory and infrastructure planning for community deployment to enable scalable and sustainable impact.

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Collaborators and Partners
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Leading Universities
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PFAS chemicals pervasive in products, water systems, and the environment
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Percentage of community water systems tested showing detections.