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erronis

(18,114 posts)
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:21 AM Sep 2024

Ditch Bottled Water Now: Hidden Health Risks and Environmental Damage Uncovered

https://scitechdaily.com/ditch-bottled-water-now-hidden-health-risks-and-environmental-damage-uncovered/

Estimated 1 million bottles bought every minute and demand is rising, warns expert.

Every minute, one million bottles of water are purchased globally, a habit that not only strains human health with the risk of chemical contamination from plastics but also burdens our planet by contributing to immense plastic waste and greenhouse gas emissions. Despite this, only 9% of these bottles are recycled, underscoring an urgent need for a shift towards tap water, which is both safer and more environmentally friendly.

Growing Concerns Over Bottled Water

The huge and growing toll bottled water is taking on human and planetary health warrants an urgent rethink of its use as 1 million bottles are bought every minute around the globe, with that figure set to rise further still amid escalating demand, warn population health experts in a commentary published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health.

Some 2 billion people around the world with limited or no access to safe drinking water rely on bottled water. But for the rest of us, it’s largely a matter of convenience and the unshaken belief—aided and abetted by industry marketing—that bottled water is safer and often healthier than tap water.

Health Risks From Bottled Water

It isn’t, insist the authors from Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar.

That’s because bottled water often isn’t subject to the same rigorous quality and safety standards as tap water, and it can carry the risk of harmful chemicals leaching from the plastic bottles used for it, especially if it’s stored for a long time, and/or exposed to sunlight and high temperatures, they explain.

Between an estimated 10% and 78% of bottled water samples contain contaminants, including microplastics, often classified as hormone (endocrine) disruptors, and various other substances including phthalates (used to make plastics more durable) and bisphenol A (BPA).


But how are the big beverage corporations supposed to pay their CEOs?
Ah. A tax on tap water. And a scare tactic on wells and springs.
20 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Ditch Bottled Water Now: Hidden Health Risks and Environmental Damage Uncovered (Original Post) erronis Sep 2024 OP
Gonna have to convince consumers. Personally, I much prefer my refillable metal water bottles. Silent Type Sep 2024 #1
Me too. The steel vacuum bottles are great, filled with tap water. erronis Sep 2024 #2
When did we have to have water with us every minute of the day? CrispyQ Sep 2024 #3
Well, water itself isn't a bad thing, it's very healthy Wednesdays Sep 2024 #5
Some of us have medical conditions that require us to drink water. littlemissmartypants Sep 2024 #16
Well duh, of course I get that. CrispyQ Sep 2024 #19
Thanks for your reply. It's a little OTT, IMO. littlemissmartypants Sep 2024 #20
A million bottles a minute translates to some very big 24 hour numbers bucolic_frolic Sep 2024 #4
And way too much of that plastic ends up in the environment, oceans, and in our bodies/cells. erronis Sep 2024 #10
I work in a food store. no_hypocrisy Sep 2024 #6
I was a delivery driver when bottled water first started to be a big deal. Anheuse Busch bombed with their first brewens Sep 2024 #7
Buy a filter. There are many types.. bucolic_frolic Sep 2024 #11
Should be banned MichMan Sep 2024 #8
I avoid bottled water like the plague. Nothing but downsides for health and the environment. Martin68 Sep 2024 #9
When the tap water... 2naSalit Sep 2024 #12
Agree - and I've been there. But the large (gallon or larger) containers are probably safer erronis Sep 2024 #13
I buy gallon sized jugs... 2naSalit Sep 2024 #14
Me too, 2na. ❤️ littlemissmartypants Sep 2024 #18
My well water is horrible. I pay for county water but it hasn't arrived littlemissmartypants Sep 2024 #17
I drink tap water iemanja Sep 2024 #15

Silent Type

(8,611 posts)
1. Gonna have to convince consumers. Personally, I much prefer my refillable metal water bottles.
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:24 AM
Sep 2024

CrispyQ

(39,189 posts)
3. When did we have to have water with us every minute of the day?
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:29 AM
Sep 2024

I remember a time when we went 2-3 hours without a drink! Unless I'm taking a long drive, I never carry water with me.

Also, I think the water in my area tastes pretty good & better than a lot of bottled water.

Wednesdays

(20,367 posts)
5. Well, water itself isn't a bad thing, it's very healthy
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:44 AM
Sep 2024

It's just that we need to cut back on plastics to contain it.

littlemissmartypants

(26,780 posts)
16. Some of us have medical conditions that require us to drink water.
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 10:19 AM
Sep 2024

Water is the only beverage my doctor wants me to drink. I can't have any of the other beverages I used to enjoy. I occasionally have milk.

But that's a splurge and only occasionally or I pay a price for it physically.

It's very boring but the alternative is much worse.

bucolic_frolic

(49,111 posts)
4. A million bottles a minute translates to some very big 24 hour numbers
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:29 AM
Sep 2024

Like 1.44 Billion bottles per day. 525,600,000,000 per year. That's 525 Billion

erronis

(18,114 posts)
10. And way too much of that plastic ends up in the environment, oceans, and in our bodies/cells.
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 12:17 PM
Sep 2024

Long-term effects on all living creatures are not known but probably harmful. But we may not be there to run scholarly research anymore.

no_hypocrisy

(50,541 posts)
6. I work in a food store.
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 10:56 AM
Sep 2024

You should see how every other customer is buying 1 or more pallets of water (24 bottles).

They could have bought a thermos or water bottle and just filled them up continuously.

 

brewens

(15,359 posts)
7. I was a delivery driver when bottled water first started to be a big deal. Anheuse Busch bombed with their first
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 11:02 AM
Sep 2024

attempt. I hated packing that crap and dusting it off on the shelves because it never sold. I think it was Asente' essence flavored or something like that. It was still in glass bottles too.

No one has been more surprised that people will waste their money on that crap.

bucolic_frolic

(49,111 posts)
11. Buy a filter. There are many types..
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 12:23 PM
Sep 2024

charcoal, sediment, reverse osmosis, iron ...... you change them 1-4 times a year.

Martin68

(25,124 posts)
9. I avoid bottled water like the plague. Nothing but downsides for health and the environment.
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 12:09 PM
Sep 2024

When our T'ai Chi school holds events we fill a cooler with well water.

2naSalit

(95,882 posts)
12. When the tap water...
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 01:22 PM
Sep 2024

Doesn't seem safe, regardless of what you're told by local authorities, you have to buy drinking water, it rarely comes in glass containers anymore.

erronis

(18,114 posts)
13. Agree - and I've been there. But the large (gallon or larger) containers are probably safer
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 01:31 PM
Sep 2024

from plastic contamination and most surely are a lot cheaper than the .5 liter bottles.

2naSalit

(95,882 posts)
14. I buy gallon sized jugs...
Sat Sep 28, 2024, 01:40 PM
Sep 2024

And avoid the small bottles. I do put the empties in recycle but there's no guarantee what happens after they go into the bin.

littlemissmartypants

(26,780 posts)
17. My well water is horrible. I pay for county water but it hasn't arrived
Sun Sep 29, 2024, 10:31 AM
Sep 2024

Yet and it's been two years. They tore up the property putting in the pipelines and the hydrants but not a drop flows through them.

Even though my well goes down eighty feet the water is hard, full of iron and lately I have noticed fine sand in containers I fill up and set aside for watering plants.

It's like the residue from sandpaper, very fine. Imagine what that would do to internal organs. I don't even like to wash in it. It dries out my skin and makes me itch. But I don't have a choice.

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