Earning trust in a fragmented PFAS legal landscape

Earning trust in a fragmented PFAS legal landscape

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In brief

  • Inconsistencies across global PFAS regulation can cause confusion and mistrust, turning clear communication and cultural credibility into strategic assets.
  • A proactive engagement approach built on social licence and early communication with communities is essential for navigating PFAS response in complex environments.

In Part 1 of this series, we established that technical accuracy alone cannot resolve community anxiety about PFAS. The second challenge is no less daunting. Even where intent to engage exists, the rules that govern PFAS reporting and remediation add a new layer of complexity to the challenge.

In many jurisdictions, the requirements around PFAS management are constantly changing. Guidelines are being regularly changed, and enforcement varies from country to country and region to region. This fragmentation creates confusion not just for the public, but for the government agencies and asset owners trying to respond.

For those managing PFAS investigations and remediation, this raises a fundamental question: how do you build trust when the science is evolving and the rules are still being written and changed?

A patchwork of regulation

Unlike contaminants with well-established global standards, PFAS is regulated through a mixture of precautionary guidelines, emerging science and region-specific thresholds. The US Environmental Protection Agency’s enforceable limits on PFAS in drinking water differ from those in Australia, the European Union and Canada. Even within single nations, state and provincial authorities often apply different interpretations and risk tolerances.

This inconsistency can erode public confidence. Communities may receive conflicting messages from local agencies, national regulators, independent scientists or social media channels. When the regulatory picture is fragmented, engagement cannot stop at meeting compliance requirements. It must explain why differences exist, clarify what is understood and uncertain, and place these decisions in a context that resonates with local concerns.

Why social licence matters more than ever

Meeting regulatory requirements may satisfy agencies, but it does not secure public confidence. With PFAS, acceptance hinges on something less formal but more powerful: social licence.

Social licence is never written into law. It is built through relationships that show respect, openness and cultural awareness. Communities judge not only the facts of a response, but whether they are included in shaping it, whether their concerns are acknowledged, and whether the process feels fair.

“Social licence isn't a permit - it's a reflection of earned trust, shared decisions and cultural respect.”

Sharon Sebastian
Executive Advisor, Business Advisory, GHD

The role of cultural awareness and inclusion

Trust depends on recognising and respecting the realities of different communities. In Australia, First Nations peoples hold distinct cultural and legal ties to the environment, and engagement must acknowledge this. Supporting Indigenous leadership and drawing on traditional ecological knowledge in assessments and remediation are practical ways to honour that connection.

For culturally and linguistically diverse communities, genuine inclusion goes beyond literal translation. It can mean working with bilingual leaders, producing audio or visual material instead of written fact sheets, or establishing advisory panels that mirror local demographics.

Inclusion is not a formality. It is the basis of engagement that communities recognise as credible and genuine. Cultural awareness and inclusion show why engagement cannot be one-size-fits-all. But in fragmented regulatory settings, principles alone are not enough. Organisations need practical methods that make engagement systematic, credible and resilient.

When engagement reflects culture, language and lived experience, communities see it as more than consultation - they see it as respect.

Carla Pignatelli
Service Line Leader, APAC Engagement and Communication, GHD

Five strategies to build trust in complex environments

When regulation is unsettled, clear and consistent engagement becomes the anchor. The following approaches can strengthen trust even when scientific or legal certainty is still out of reach:

  • Anticipate regulatory divergence
    National alignment may never arrive. Plan for guidelines to change and design communication and investigation strategies that can adapt.
  • Localise the message
    Go beyond generic fact sheets. Shape narratives with communities, reflecting local history, geography, language and cultural values.
  • Establish community advisory groups
    Bring community representatives into the process early and sustain their involvement. Advisory groups provide feedback, build transparency and reinforce shared ownership.
  • Train for risk communication
    PFAS conversations call for calm, empathetic and technically assured communicators. Equip teams to address anxiety, outrage and uncertainty with clarity.
  • Partner with credible intermediaries
    Work alongside health authorities, government departments and Indigenous leaders. Their endorsement strengthens legitimacy and broadens reach.

These strategies position PFAS engagement not simply as a technical task, but as a test of governance that demands inclusive and visible leadership.

Treat communities as partners in the process

Many organisations still view PFAS engagement through a procedural lens: host a town hall, send a fact sheet, publish a FAQ. But as awareness grows and expectations rise, this isn’t enough.

Communities are no longer passive recipients of information. They are active co-creators of the process. They want to know how decisions are made, who is accountable, and how their voices are shaping the outcome.

A model of engagement which is built on ongoing dialogue, cultural safety and trust will deliver far better outcomes than a transactional one.

The bottom line

PFAS regulation will continue to evolve, and inconsistency across jurisdictions is unlikely to disappear soon. For communities, this uncertainty can erode confidence; for organisations, it raises the stakes of how engagement is handled.

Compliance may satisfy the rulebook, but it does not guarantee trust. That depends on communication that is transparent, culturally grounded and responsive to local realities.

In the end, navigating PFAS successfully is not only about meeting standards. It is about showing leadership in how those standards are explained, applied and lived with by the people most affected.

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