FOOD Alarming Study Finds Most Bottled Water Is Full of Microplastics

Countrybumpkin

Veteran Member
That plastic bottle of water? Apparently it’s full of plastic. According to the organization Agir pour l’Environment (Acting for the Environment), 78% of bottled water from the best-selling brands in France is contaminated with microplastics.


“Every week, we ingest an average of 5 grams, the equivalent of a credit card,” the NGO notes in its latest report. These microplastics then contaminate the water cycle, soil, food chain and even our own bodies. Microplastics are tiny, virtually invisible fragments of plastic between 0.0001 and 5 millimeters. Researchers found that “changes in the gastrointestinal tract from plastic are linked to metabolic diseases like obesity, diabetes and chronic liver disease.”

As Food Navigator notes, a study by scientists at the State University of New York in 2018 discovered there are roughly twice as many plastic particles in bottled water compared to tap water. For the new study by Agir pour l’Environment, in conjunction with the lab Labocéa, virgin and recycled plastic bottles were analyzed from the top-selling bottled water brands. The organization suggests that most of these microplastics come from the bottle, cork and bottling process, and that subjected to strong heat and light, even more microplastics might be released.

Natural Mineral Waters Europe (NMWE) — the trade association representing the bottled water industry — has dismissed these claims, suggesting the study was limited and the results not yet duplicated. They also point to a World Health Organization report from 2019 that was inconclusive about microplastic toxicity.

Given that there’s no upside to microplastics in your water, Agir pour l’Environment has outlined an action plan that includes banning single-use plastics, utilizing biodegradable materials on bottle designs, discontinuing the use of plastic with food that will be heated and improved testing for microplastic detection.

Alarming Study Finds Most Bottled Water Is Full of Microplastics (msn.com)
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
I call BS as most if not all bottled water made to day is produced by using Reverse Osmosis and this process uses a membrane that has really small holes in it and the water has to pass threw this membrane and it will filter out minerals even salt that may be in the water.

Just read the label on the bottel and see if it says that somewhere on the label.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I call BS as most if not all bottled water made to day is produced by using Reverse Osmosis and this process uses a membrane that has really small holes in it and the water has to pass threw this membrane and it will filter out minerals even salt that may be in the water.

Just read the label on the bottel and see if it says that somewhere on the label.

Here in the states this would be true, note that the article is from some european outfit.
 

oops

Veteran Member
There's very few bottled waters that I've tried that I haven't groused about them tastin like plastic...so I dont use bottled water often...can't remember the one brand hubby found in town that doesn't have the plastic taste to it...always wondered if it was from gettin over heated either in the warehouse or in transit...
 

tm1439m

Veteran Member
I hate bottled water taste. Our current condition of local water supply is nasty due to algae growth or something like that from low rain and summer heat. So they dump lots of nasty tasting chemicals in it.

So we have resorted to bottled water but not the small single serve bottles. We buy the gallon jugs and there are still some of them that have a fowl taste but if you sample different ones there are some that do not have a bad taste.

Distilled have an odd taste to me. We only like the jugs that say "Spring Water" on them.

Purified is nasty to me. I do have very sensitive taste buds.
 

john70

Veteran Member
IS THIS AN STUDY OF microplastics IN WATER

OR A STUDY OF WATER IN PLASTIC

DID WE STUDY microplastics IN COKE OR BEER OR WINE

DID WE STUDY microplastics IN ANY OTHER PRODUCT IN PLASTIC

OR

IS THIS JUST A HIT PIECE ON BOTTLED WATER

A STUDY PAID FOR BY AN Environmental CLUB CALLED Agir pour

IF YOU WISH THE WORLD TO BOTTLE EVERYTHING IN GLASS

I WOULD AGREE THAT WOULD BE A LOT BETTER WAY TO STORE FOOD

THE FOOD WOULD HAVE A LONGER SHELF LIFE

THE FOOD WOULD NOT TASTE LIKE PLASTIC
 

9idrr

Veteran Member
Full, to me, indicates full, as in no room for anything else. You know, as in my gas tank is full.
Some folks just react to the emotional appeal that re-inforces their pet cause. Glad to see that it ain't a universal trait on this board.
This kinda thing does sure push some folks buttons, though, don't it?
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
I call BS as most if not all bottled water made to day is produced by using Reverse Osmosis and this process uses a membrane that has really small holes in it and the water has to pass threw this membrane and it will filter out minerals even salt that may be in the water.

BUT.....it's in a PLASTIC BOTTLE!! So all the filtering and RO and everything else is probably for naught as it's IN A PLASTIC BOTTLE.

The Romans had their lead plumbing, cooking and storage containers. We've got Plastic and Teflon and all kinds of other chemicals and oil based products in everything we use and consume. A thousand years from now archeologist will probably call our layer of a dig "The TOXIC ZONE".
 

ktrapper

Veteran Member
IS THIS AN STUDY OF microplastics IN WATER

OR A STUDY OF WATER IN PLASTIC

DID WE STUDY microplastics IN COKE OR BEER OR WINE

DID WE STUDY microplastics IN ANY OTHER PRODUCT IN PLASTIC

OR

IS THIS JUST A HIT PIECE ON BOTTLED WATER

A STUDY PAID FOR BY AN Environmental CLUB CALLED Agir pour

IF YOU WISH THE WORLD TO BOTTLE EVERYTHING IN GLASS

I WOULD AGREE THAT WOULD BE A LOT BETTER WAY TO STORE FOOD

THE FOOD WOULD HAVE A LONGER SHELF LIFE

THE FOOD WOULD NOT TASTE LIKE PLASTIC
My whiskey comes in glass. All good here
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
I call BS as most if not all bottled water made to day is produced by using Reverse Osmosis and this process uses a membrane that has really small holes in it and the water has to pass threw this membrane and it will filter out minerals even salt that may be in the water.

Just read the label on the bottel and see if it says that somewhere on the label.
It's the bottle, not the water..... the bottle leaches it's plastic into the water. The longer the water is in the bottle, the hotter the bottle gets, etc.... the more the bottle leaches. That's why glass with the same water, is not the same....it will remain pure, unless of course pathogens develop over time...etc...
 

Coulter

Veteran Member
Five mm is a quarter inch. I think the author had some other value in mind.
As I recall he said this was the size of the eraser on your pencil in another article I read.

I thought if this true then at some point I would have been able to see some plastic.

My only interest in bottled water is for storage - but I guess if I need it nonvisible plastic will be the least of my concerns.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
How long after the water is bottled does it take before the microplastics enter into the water? I've always heard that bottled water last about a year, before the plastic starts breaking down.

What about those plastic water storage containers?

I keep a lot of bottled water on hand just for emergencies and plastic storage containers, too. I keep the bottled water in rotation that gets used up every 6 months or so. I also drink bottled water, not from the tap, since we're on community water.
 

Luddite

Veteran Member
So, in other words no plastic should ever touch our food or drink? That's just silly.
I look in my crystal ball and see a bigger picture. No plastic car parts.
No plastic that might get into the ocean.

No plastic 3d printed items. Even a luddite like me can see the revolutionary advantages of 3d printed items.

I will be clear. I hope. :)

This will be an off-shoot of control related to the "climate change religion".

Silly or not to some of us, it WILL get more noticeable.

This goes in the "hope I'm wrong category"...
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
There's very few bottled waters that I've tried that I haven't groused about them tastin like plastic...so I dont use bottled water often...can't remember the one brand hubby found in town that doesn't have the plastic taste to it...always wondered if it was from gettin over heated either in the warehouse or in transit...

We have Nalgene bottles for taking water with us.
 
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