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The bottled water industry promotes an image of purity, but
comprehensive testing by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) reveals
a surprising array of chemical contaminants in every bottled water
brand analyzed, including toxic byproducts of chlorination in Walmart’s
Sam’s Choice and Giant Supermarket's Acadia brands, at levels no
different than routinely found in tap water. Several Sam's Choice
samples purchased in California exceeded legal limits for bottled water
contaminants in that state. Cancer-causing contaminants in bottled
water purchased in 5 states (North Carolina, California, Virginia,
Delaware and Maryland) and the District of Columbia substantially
exceeded the voluntary standards established by the bottled water
industry.
Unlike tap water, where consumers are provided with test results
every year, the bottled water industry does not disclose the results of
any contaminant testing that it conducts. Instead, the industry hides
behind the claim that bottled water is held to the same safety
standards as tap water. But with promotional campaigns saturated with
images of mountain springs, and prices 1,900 times the price of tap
water, consumers are clearly led to believe that they are buying a
product that has been purified to a level beyond the water that comes
out of the garden hose.
To the contrary, our tests strongly indicate that the purity of
bottled water cannot be trusted. Given the industry's refusal to make
available data to support their claims of superiority, consumer
confidence in the purity of bottled water is simply not justified.
Laboratory tests conducted for EWG at one of the country’s leading
water quality laboratories found that 10 popular brands of bottled
water, purchased from grocery stores and other retailers in 9 states
and the District of Columbia, contained 38 chemical pollutants
altogether, with an average of 8 contaminants in each brand. More than
one-third of the chemicals found are not regulated in bottled water. In
the Sam's Choice and Acadia brands levels of some chemicals exceeded
legal limits in California as well as industry-sponsored voluntary
safety standards. Four brands were also contaminated with bacteria.
Walmart and Giant Brands No Different than Tap Water
Two of 10 brands tested, Walmart's and Giant's store brands, bore
the chemical signature of standard municipal water treatment — a
cocktail of chlorine disinfection byproducts, and for Giant water, even
fluoride. In other words, this bottled water was chemically
indistinguishable from tap water. The only striking difference: the
price tag.
In both brands levels of disinfection byproducts exceeded safety
standards established by the state of California and the bottled water
industry:
- Walmart’s Sam’s Choice bottled water purchased at several locations
in the San Francisco bay area was polluted with disinfection byproducts
called trihalomethanes at levels that exceed the state’s legal limit
for bottled water (CDPR 2008). These byproducts are linked to cancer
and reproductive problems and form when disinfectants react with
residual pollution in the water. Las Vegas tap water was the source for
these bottles, according to Walmart representatives (EWG 2008).
- Also in Walmart’s Sam’s Choice brand, lab tests found a
cancer-causing chemical called bromodichloromethane at levels that
exceed safety standards for cancer-causing chemicals under California’s
Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986 (Proposition 65,
OEHHA 2008). EWG is filing suit under this act to ensure that Walmart
posts a warning on bottles as required by law: “WARNING: This product
contains a chemical known to the State of California to cause cancer."
- These same chemicals also polluted Giant's Acadia brand at levels
in excess of California’s safety standards, but this brand is sold only
in Mid-Atlantic states where California’s health-based limits do not
apply. Nevertheless, disinfection byproducts in both Acadia and Sam’s
Choice bottled water exceeded the industry trade association’s
voluntary safety standards (IBWA 2008a), for samples purchased in
Washington DC and 5 states (Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North
Carolina, and California). The bottled water industry boasts that its
internal regulations are stricter than the FDA bottled water
regulations(IBWA 2008b), but voluntary standards that companies are
failing to meet are of little use in protecting public health.
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