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Re: doc frank post# 26147

Thursday, 12/27/2007 10:46:05 PM

Thursday, December 27, 2007 10:46:05 PM

Post# of 97598
Bottled Water Facts

Millions and millions of dollars are spent each week on advertising campaigns to give consumers the perception that bottled water comes from some pristine mountain spring or magical underground aquifer assuring purity and quality. However, the fact is that bottled water is often times little more than just tap water in a bottle... sometimes worse!

You see, the Federal regulations that govern bottled water only require it to be as good as tap water, not better. There are no assurances, regulations or requirements that bottled water be any higher in quality than tap water, and according to some recent studies, it may often be of lower quality.

The fact is that people pay from $1 to $4 a gallon for the perception of higher quality, when in fact, the quality of bottled water is at best "unknown"! Over 90% of the cost of bottled water is in the bottle, lid and label.

The bottled water industry is full of deception and questionable ethics. Industry lobbyists successfully fight every year to keep bottled water companies from having to abide by even the minimal health standards set by the EPA for tap water. The FDA, who regulates bottled water, states that "Companies that market bottled water as being safer than tap water are defrauding the American public."

In March of 1999, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) released a report called "Bottled Water, Pure Drink or Pure Hype?" NRDC 's report points out that as much as 40% of all bottled water comes from a city water system, just like tap water. The report also focuses on the fact that 60 to 70% of all bottled water sold in the U.S. is exempt from FDA's bottled water standards, because the Federal Standards do not apply to water bottled and sold within the same state. Unless the water is transported across state lines, there is no federal regulations that govern its quality. According to the NRDC "bottled water companies have used this loop hole to avoid complying with basic health standards, such as those that apply to municipally treated tap water". Also, all carbonated or sparkling waters are completely exempt from FDA guidelines that set specific contamination limits.