Bottled
water doesn't mean better
Nestlé Pure Life is one of a few bottled waters to list source and treatment info.
Blame it on
convenience, laziness, or marketing brilliance but U.S. sales of bottled water are on the
rise, inching up 3.5 percent in 2010 after having dropped in recent years, to
$6.4 billion a year, according to industry figures.
That, despite some
increasingly unflattering revelations,— many brands don't even reveal where the
water comes from!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
In a report released earlier this year, the
Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit research and advocacy organization, analyzed
the labels and company websites of 173 bottled waters and found that about
one-fifth, including big brands Aquafina and Crystal Geyser, didn't list their
source. Another one-third didn't say how the water was treated. Many popular
brands, such as Poland Spring, list multiple sources (in its case, springs in
Maine), leaving consumers to guess which one produced their H2O. Only three brands—Gerber Pure Purified
Water, Nestle Pure Life Purified Water, and Penta Ultra-Purified Water—got the
group's highest marks for disclosing source and treatment information and using
the most advanced treatment methods.
Some brands might not
disclose their source because they don't have to. The Environmental Protection
Agency requires community water systems to divulge the source of their drinking
water in an annual Consumer Confidence Report. But bottled-water makers aren't
required to disclose where their water comes from, how it was treated, or what
contaminants it might contain. Disclosure is purely voluntary (except in
California). And the bottled stuff is subject to a less stringent safety
standard than tap water.
Bottom line. Don't be misled by crisp blue labels and
mountain vistas. Purified
tap water is the source of 49 percent of bottled water produced in the U.S., according to industry data. Many consumers
could cut out the middleman (and produce far less plastic waste) by investing
in a water filter and reusable water bottle to tote when they're on the go.
·
Drink tap water. If
you're concerned about its purity, get a water filter. Carafe or faucet-mounted
models are the least expensive and remove many common contaminants. A
reverse-osmosis filter removes more contaminants.
·
Give everyone in the
household a reusable water bottle that doesn't have bisphenol
A, a chemical linked to
reproductive problems.
·
If you must buy
bottled water, choose a brand that discloses its source and lists an advanced
purification method on its label or website. Check EWG's brand analysis
at www.ewg.org/bottled-water-2011-home.
·
To learn about your
water, read the Consumer Confidence Report. If you pay a water bill, you should
be mailed one annually. It can help you determine whether you need a water
filter, and if so, what kind.
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