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Bottled
Water Vs. Tap Water
Chemicals, contaminants, pollution, price:
new reasons to rethink what you drink and
beware of bottled water.
By Janet Majeski Jemmott
Growing
Thirst
Remember the drinking fountain, that once
ubiquitous, and free, source of H2O? It
seems quaint now. Instead, bottled water
is everywhere, in offices, airplanes, stores,
homes and restaurants across the country.
We consumed over eight billion gallons of
the stuff in 2006, a 10 percent increase
from 2005. It's refreshing, calorie-free,
convenient to carry around, tastier than
some tap water and a heck of a lot healthier
than sugary sodas. But more and more, people
are questioning whether the water, and the
package it comes in, is safe, or at least
safer than tap water -- and if the convenience
is worth the environmental impact.
What's in
That Bottle?
Evocative names and
labels depicting pastoral scenes have convinced
us that the liquid is the purest drink around.
"But no one should think that bottled
water is better regulated, better protected
or safer than tap," says Eric Goldstein,
co-director of the urban program at the
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC),
a nonprofit organization devoted to protecting
health and the environment.
Yes, some bottled water
comes from sparkling springs and other pristine
sources. But more than 25 percent of it
comes from a municipal supply. The water
is treated, purified and sold to us, often
at a thousandfold increase in price. Most
people are surprised to learn that they're
drinking glorified tap water, but bottlers
aren't required to list the source on the
label.
This year Aquafina will
begin stating on labels that its H2O comes
from public water sources. And Nestlé
Pure Life bottles will indicate whether
the water comes from public, private or
deep well sources. Dasani acknowledges on
its website, but not on the label itself,
that it draws from local water.
Labels can be misleading
at best, deceptive at worst. In one notorious
case, water coming from a well located near
a hazardous waste site was sold to many
bottlers. At least one of these companies
labeled its product "spring water."
In another case, H2O sold as "pure
glacier water" came from a public water
system in Alaska.
Lisa Ledwidge, 38, of Minneapolis,
stopped drinking bottled water a couple
of years ago, partly because she found out
that many brands come from a municipal supply.
"You're spending more per gallon than
you would on gasoline for this thing that
you can get out of the tap virtually for
free," she says. "I wondered,
Why am I spending this money while complaining
about how much gas costs? But you don't
ever hear anyone complain about the price
of bottled water." Ledwidge says she
now drinks only filtered tap water.
The controversy isn't simply
about tap vs. bottled water; most people
drink both, knowing the importance of plenty
of water. What they may not know is that
some bottled water may not be as pure as
they expect. In 1999 the NRDC tested more
than 1,000 bottles of 103 brands of water.
(This is the most recent major report on
bottled water safety.) While noting that
most bottled water is safe, the organization
found that at least one sample of a third
of the brands contained bacterial or chemical
contaminants, including carcinogens, in
levels exceeding state or industry standards.
Since the report, no major regulatory changes
have been made and bottlers haven't drastically
altered their procedures, so the risk is
likely still there.
The NRDC found that samples
of two brands were contaminated with phthalates,
in one case exceeding Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) standards for tap water. These
chemicals, used to make plastic softer,
are found in cosmetics and fragrances, shower
curtains, even baby toys, and are under
increasing scrutiny. They're endocrine disrupters,
which means they block or mimic hormones,
affecting the body's normal functions. And
the effects of exposure to the widespread
chemicals may add up.
When exposed to high levels
of phthalates during critical developmental
periods, male fetuses can have malformed
reproductive organs, including undescended
testicles. Some experts link phthalates
to low sperm counts.
Water bottles do not contain
the chemical, which means the phthalates
detected by the NRDC probably got into the
water during processing at the bottling
plant, or were present in the original water
source (phthalates have been found in some
tap water).
Bottled water is regulated
for safety, but it's a tricky thing. The
EPA regulates tap water, while the FDA oversees
bottled. Yet FDA oversight doesn't apply
to water packaged and sold within the same
state, leaving some 60 to 70 percent of
bottled water, including the contents of
watercooler jugs, free of FDA regulation,
according to the NRDC's report. In this
case, testing depends on the states, but
the NRDC found that they often don't have
adequate resources to oversee bottled water,
in some cases lacking even one full-time
person for an entire state.
The FDA requires bottlers
to regularly test for contaminants, but
the agency considers bottled water a low-risk
product, so plants may not be inspected
every year. According to one FDA official,
it's the manufacturer's responsibility to
ensure that the product complies with laws
and regulations. Some bottlers turn to NSF
International, a trade group that conducts
yearly unannounced inspections of plants,
looking at the source of the water and the
treatment process, and testing for contaminants.
Other companies belong to the International
Bottled Water Association (IBWA), which
also performs annual unannounced tests to
ensure the plant is up to FDA standards.
IBWA has its own regulations, some of which
are stricter than the FDA's.
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