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Health warning over safety of bottled water

By Hickman, Consumer Affairs Correspondent

Published: 03 January 2007

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article2121674.ece

Britain's £2bn-a-year thirst for bottled water is not only financially and

environmentally foolish, it may even harm the drinkers' health,

campaigners say.

Possible problems associated with shop-bought water include excess sodium,

the leaching of toxins and benzene contamination, according to a report

published yesterday by the sustainable food and farming group Sustain.

The industry was thriving because the public believed that mineral and

spring water was superior, yet blind taste tests often found people

preferred tap water, said the report Have You Bottled It?

Tap water was good quality and environmentally friendly, the report

argued, while the bottled version generated pollution and was associated

with health fears.

British people have an increasing appetite for bottled water with sales

rising strongly year after year, up 10 per cent in 2006. New Year

resolutions are expected to lift sales this month.

But Sustain points out that the last annual figures from the Drinking

Water Inspectorate showed 99.96 per cent of tap water met stringent

standards in 2005. The tiny proportion of water that did not meet all

testing criteria was still safe to drink.

The campaigning group said marketing encouraged customers to buy bottled

water, which at 95p a litre was 1,000 times more expensive than the tap.

" Bottled water marketing plays heavily on notions of purity, peace,

silence, nature - an antidote to our busy urban lifestyles, " the report

said.

" The product is also promoted heavily to 15- to 34-year-old women and has

become a 'must have' fashion accessory. " But it warned: " Not only are

there no convincing health reasons for preferring bottled water to tap

water, there are some health concerns about bottled water.

" Indeed the French Senate advises people who drink bottled mineral water

to change brands frequently, because the minerals in particular brands may

be harmful in high doses, if consumed over a long period. "

People with heart conditions were urged to check labels for trace levels

of sodium. A random sample of bottles for the report found levels ranged

from 3 to 18 miligrams per litre. The recommended daily allowance is

1,600mg a day.

Among other health concerns, the report recalled that a potential

carcinogen, benzene, was found in Perrier in 1989 and bromate - another

carcinogen - in Coca-Cola's Dasani in 2004.

Water from bottles made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) also contain

low levels of the heavy metal antimony. On leaching, the report warned:

" It is possible that some potentially toxic chemicals may migrate out of

the plastic product and into whatever it is in contact with. " This

happened in October 2005 when the BBC found unopened bottles of Volvic

that had been contaminated with napthalene.

Sustain said that water bottles contained little if any recycled plastic

and had travelled up to 10,000 miles - in the case of " most notorious

example " , from Fiji.

Although the need to hydrate spurred bottle sales, Sustain pointed out

that a third of the water required by the human body could come from fruit

and vegetables. And the Food Standards Agency recommend people daily drink

1.2 litres of fluid - not just water.

The British Soft Drinks Association dismissed any health concerns.

" Bottled water is safe, " it said. And the products conformed to the

highest standards of " hygiene, provenance and sustainability " .

Possible problems

Sodium

Health professionals advise that sodium intake should be limited. Sustain

says: " While mineral waters usually contain only trace amounts of minerals

- including sodium - people with high blood pressure or who have had a

stroke or a heart attack should check labels carefully. "

Antimony

The heavy metal, antimony (Sb), can be present in bottles made from

polyethylene terephthalate (PET). Researchers at the University of

Heidelberg in Germany found levels of antimony within guidelines for

drinking water, but Professor Shotyk said: " There is unlikely to

be a beneficial effect of Sb contamination. "

Contaminants

The potential carcinogen benzene was discovered in bottles of Perrier in

1989 and another carcinogen, bromate, in Dasani in 1989. Production was

halted.

Leaching

Toxic chemicals may leach out of plastic into the water. A plastic bottle

can also absorb chemicals so water should be stored away from chemicals.

Source: Sustain

*

The material in this post is distributed without

profit to those who have expressed a prior interest

in receiving the included information for research

and educational purposes.For more information go to:

http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html

http://oregon.uoregon.edu/~csundt/documents.htm

If you wish to use copyrighted material from this

email for purposes that go beyond 'fair use', you

must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

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