Bottled Water: No Longer Cool
July 2007
By Linda Mason Hunter
©
2007 Linda Mason Hunter. May not be reprinted without
written permission of the author.

Stainless Steel Water Bottle |
Bottled water is the second largest beverage seller
in the U.S. today, right behind soft drinks. But where
toting a personal plastic water bottle used to be the
definition of eco-chic, it's no longer cool. Not only
is it not green (bottled water produces unnecessary garbage
and strains the ecosystem through its production and
transport), bottled water poses health concerns.
The water
itself may be no better than water coming out of your
kitchen tap. At least one-fourth of bottled water is
actually tap water (some estimates go as high as 40
percent). And some brands contain chemical
contaminants at levels above strict state limits. If
consumed over a long period of time, some of these
contaminants can cause health problems.
Even if the
water is pure, a plastic container may leach chemicals such
as phthalates or bisphenol-A (linked to increased risk of
birth defects, miscarriage, and prostate cancer) into the
bottled water. Scratches in the plastic, harsh
detergents, and boiling liquids exacerbate the leaching.
Types of Bottles
For personal health, the ideal water container is glass.
However, glass bottles are rare, heavy, and breakable.
If purchasing water in plastic, find out what kind of
plastic it is by looking on the bottom of the bottle (near
the three-arrow recycling symbol). It's best to avoid
highly flexible containers and those made of polyvinyl
chloride (PVC), both known to leach plasticizers into
bottled water. If the recycling code is the number
three, the bottle is made of PVC. Polycarbonate
bottles (PC, a hard plastic claiming to reduce plastic odor)
are not a healthy choice, either. Under some
conditions they can still leach bisphenol-A and, with a
recycling code of 7, are rarely recyclable.
The new bio-based alternative plastics, such as those made
with corn starch (not really a plastic, but with similar
properties) are problematic, too. While reusable and
readily biodegradable, bio-based plastics are usually made
from genetically modified corn, and no one yet knows what
such engineering does to human and environmental health in
the long term.
The Solution
If you want to carry a water bottle around with you, think
about using a stainless steel bottle, but make certain it
doesn't have a plastic liner. If you can't avoid
drinking water from plastic bottles, make certain it has not
been exposed to high temperatures, such as being left inside
a locked up car or near a glass window. Plasticizers
become unstable when warm.
A Better Alternative
Why pay so much and get so little? Instead of buying
bottled water, use water filters at home and fill your
personal non-plastic reusable bottle with filtered tap
water. Reverse osmosis combined with solid block
carbon filtration removes most common contaminants.
Activated carbon/ion exchange filters (either faucet-mounted
or pitcher filters) do a decent, though less effective job.
Such measures yield savings all around:
 |
Save 1.5 million tons of plastic
from ending up in landfills. |
 |
Get rid of contaminants normally
found in tap water, such as chlorine, cryptosporidium,
Giardia, lead, and pesticide runoff. |
 |
Save money. Where bottled
water can cost 10,000 times more per gallon than tap
water, filtered tap water costs as little as ten cents a
gallon. |
 |
Using filters at home is a safer
health bet than buying bottled water. |
First published by the Healthy House Institute,
www.healthyhouseinstitute.com.
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