Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,156,194 members, 7,829,271 topics. Date: Wednesday, 15 May 2024 at 11:24 PM

Bottled Drinking Water – Sources And Contents - Nairaland / General - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Bottled Drinking Water – Sources And Contents (172 Views)

Snake Inside Bottled Water Pack (Pictures) / Beware: Fake LA Sien Bottled Water / Lagos Beggar Refuses Sachet Water, Insists On Getting Bottled Water (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

Bottled Drinking Water – Sources And Contents by aditya42: 1:06pm On Oct 22, 2021
People in the United States spent an estimated $11 billion in 2006 on more than eight billion gallons of bottled drinking water.

Dividing that figure by the U.S. population, you will find that the average person consumed almost 28 gallons of bottled drinking water. We drank more bottled drinking water than milk, coffee, or beer.

Did we know the source of that bottled drinking water? Did we know what was in it?
“The consumer doesn’t seem to care about the source,” said Gary Hemphill, managing director of New York’s Beverage Marketing Corp., top compiler of beverage industry statistics. “As long as it tastes good.”

We should care about the source, though. We should care about where bottlers get the water, and what they put into it before they sell it to us.

Facts about Bottled Drinking Water

Get the facts before you buy. Know the source and content of your bottled drinking water.
Visit Us:[urlhttps://www.coldfeargame.com] coldfeargames.com[/url]

Not all bottled drinking waters are the same. Even though the bottle shows flowing rivers or mountain vistas, you must read the label carefully to know if the water came from mountain springs or municipal pipes. Bottled water is not necessarily cleaner or safer than tap water.

1. Bottled drinking water can be tap water.

In 2004, Coca-Cola introduced Dasani bottled drinking water to Great Britain. Within weeks, British newspapers discovered that Dasani was simply processed tap water. Then bromate, a cancer-causing chemical was discovered in Dasani produced in Britain.

Three years later, all of Europe remains a Dasani-free zone. Most Americans are probably unaware that Dasani, like much of our bottled drinking water, does not bubble forth from pristine mountain springs.

It flows from the same water pipes that deliver tap water to city kitchens and bathrooms. Dasani passes through a filtering process and, according to Coke, is “enhanced” with minerals, but it is simply tapped water. Aquafina bottled drinking water also comes from municipal pipes.

2. Bottled drinking water can be spring water.

FDA guidelines define spring water as water that flows naturally to the surface from underground. If the label does not specify “spring water”, it is not. Unfortunately, even if the label does say “spring water”, you have no assurance that the water is pure.

FDA rules allow bottlers to call bottled drinking water “spring water” even when it is brought to the surface from a pumped well and is treated with chemicals. The actual source of the water may not be the pristine spring we imagine.

One company label observed read “Spring Water” (picturing a lake surrounded by mountains), but the water actually was found to come from an industrial parking lot near a hazardous waste site!

3. Bottled drinking water can be mineral water.

FDA guidelines state that mineral water also comes from underground, but contains at least 250 parts per million of dissolved solids such as minerals and trace elements. Mineral waters have a stronger taste, which some prefer.

Mineral water is distinguished from other types of bottled drinking water by its constant level and relative proportions of mineral and trace elements at the point of emergence from the source. No minerals may be added to this product, and those that exist naturally should be safe. Some sources, however, may contain lead.

4. Bottled drinking water can contain additives.

Bottlers add fluoride to some bottled drinking water, but the label doesn’t tell you. Some bottlers add disinfectants, but the label says nothing about them. Bottled drinking water may contain added minerals and vitamins.

It may contain added electrolytes. The FDA defines bottled water as water that is intended for human consumption and sealed in bottles or other containers with no added ingredients - except a safe and suitable antimicrobial agent. Fluoride also may be added within FDA limits.

5. Bottled drinking water can be impure.

The FDA regulates bottled drinking water, which is classified as a “food”. The Environmental Protection Agency regulates tap water. Amazingly, the EPA guidelines for municipal water are stricter than the FDA restrictions for bottled drinking water!

You might buy bottled drinking water that is acceptable to the FDA but is not acceptable for use as ordinary bathroom tap water. Tests for the Cryptosporidium parasite aren’t even recommended by the FDA for bottled drinking water.

Plastic bottles in which your bottled drinking water comes are stamped on the bottom with a number in a triangle. Most bottles are #1, which means they are made of plastic that leaches into the bottled drinking water.

6. Bottled drinking water can be costly.

Beverage Marketing Corp. says a typical half-liter (approximately 2 cups) of bottled drinking water sells for about one dollar in the U.S. At that rate, we are paying about $7.50 per gallon when we buy bottled drinking water in those convenient bottles.

Cheaper by the case or in 5-gallon jugs delivered to the home, your bottled drinking water still may be costing you $50 or more monthly. As I write this, regular, unleaded gas averaged less than $2 per gallon, according to AAA. Bottled drinking water is not inexpensive.

Good bottled drinking water does exist, but consider the above facts before making your purchase. Also consider that municipal tap water is not necessarily a great or even acceptable option.

Read More: Xenoverse 2 Transformations – Dragon Ball

(1) (Reply)

Get Your Verified Paypal Account Now! / Many Trapped As 21-storey Building Collapses In Lagos / Make Easy And Legit Money

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 14
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.