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Breaking Research For 3-31-99

 


33% of  Bottled Water Not Fit to Drink!


 

Tap water is regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency and has stricter safety requirements than bottled water.

 

Bottle watter is portrayed as pure - more pure than tap water. At least that is the perception everyone has of bottled water.

The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) tested more than 1,000 bottles of 103 different brands of bottled water from bought in California, Florida, Illinois, New York, Texas and the District of Columbia.

About one-third of the brands tested had at least one sample that was contaminated with high levels of pollutants that exceeded levels allowed by California or bottled water industry standards or guidelines.

The study found 22 percent of waters contained levels of synthetic compounds such as arsenic that exceeded the California limit, and 17 percent contained levels of bacteria above voluntary industry standards.

More than one-fifth of tested brands contained levels of bacteria or cancer-causing compounds that exceeded the California limit, which is the strictest in the country.

Seventeen percent of tested brands contained more bacteria than allowed under voluntary purity guidelines.

13 states have  no staff or resources dedicated to regulating bottled water.

The study also found that around 40 percent of bottled waters are nothing more than re-packaged municipal tap water which may or may not have been subject to additional treatment.

Currently, bottled water is required to be tested less frequently than city tap water for bacteria and chemical contaminants. “Bottled water is essentially regulated on the honor system in most states, said study author Erik Olson. There is no requirement that water be tested in certified labs. Bottlers are not required to report known standards violations. And unlike tap water suppliers, bottlers need not disclose to consumers known contaminants in their products.”

So how do you find out if the bottled water you buy is safe and pure?

 “Most times you would have no idea,” Olson said. “The consumer is left out in the cold.”

The Food and Drug administration regulates bottled water on a federal level, but waters bottled and sold within the same state (about 60 to 70 percent of all bottled water) are exempt and regulated by state authorities.

Tap water is regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency which has stricter requirements for water including disinfection and testing for parasites such as giardia.

"Bottled water is essentially regulated on the honor system in most states," said Eric Olson, one of the authors of the report. "Unlike tap water suppliers, bottlers need not disclose to consumers known contaminants in their products."

Americans drink an estimated 3.4 billion gallons of bottled water, often sold as distilled water, spring water or mineral water, each year. Consumption has been increasing about 10 percent a year, the industry says.

 

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