Why “Raw Water” is a Raw Deal
Why “Raw Water” is a Raw Deal
COMMENTARY
WEDNESDAY,
JANUARY 17, 2018
Americans have good reasons to question the
quality of their drinking water. EWG’s Tap Water Database shows that water
from most public utilities nationwide contains industrial or agricultural
contaminants with known health effects. “Safe” legal limits for many
contaminants are based on outdated science, and scores of contaminants aren’t
regulated at all.
But buying expensive bottled water isn’t the
answer – particularly if it’s unfiltered, untreated, and marketed with
misleading and unscientific claims.
The New York Times recently reported
on the “off-grid water movement” that is attracting followers “with
sophisticated marketing, cultural cachet, millions of dollars in funding and
influential supporters from Silicon Valley.” One Los Angeles company
called Live
Water charges almost $15 a gallon for “living spring water”
in glittering glass “orbs” with “probiotic bacteria” that allegedly has “vast
healing abilities.”
As backcountry hikers know well, drinking raw
spring water can cause serious illness from harmful bacteria and parasites.
And news reports have revealed that the
water hyped by Live Water is the same water a small Oregon utility delivers to
its customers’ taps.
Last week EWG sent a letter to Live Water seeking
answers about whether the company tests for the contaminants the Oregon utility has detected.
We also asked Live Water to remove a link to our database that could falsely
imply we support its unfounded claims.
Consumers should have the same questions about
any water sold in plastic bottles. Most popular brands are just bottled tap
water, which are sometimes filtered before bottling. Utilities have to tell
their customers what regulated contaminants were found in their tap water, but
bottled water companies don’t have to disclose test results. Despite costing up
to 2,000 times as much as tap water, last
year bottled water became the most popular beverage sold in the U.S.
Bottled water companies are reaping huge
profits by exploiting legitimate concerns. The Environmental Protection Agency
has not set a new standard for any unregulated contaminants in tap water since
the Safe Drinking Water Act was updated in 1996. Here are just some of the tap
water contaminants the EPA doesn’t regulate or for which the agency hasn’t
updated legal limits in decades:
· Radium, a naturally occurring and radioactive
element, which has been detected in drinking water systems serving over 170
million people. The EPA classifies all ionizing radiation as
carcinogenic.
· Chromium-6, or hexavalent chromium –
the “Erin Brockovich” chemical, which can be naturally occurring or result from
industrial activity. It has been detected by utilities serving 250 million
Americans.
· 1,4-Dioxane, an industrial solvent classified as a likely
carcinogen, which has been detected in drinking water supplies
for 90 million people. More than 7 million people are exposed to levels of the
chemical that can marginally increase cancer risk.
· Poly- and perfluorinated chemicals, which are
used in countless consumer products for their nonstick properties, contaminate
drinking water for at least 15 million Americans – and probably many more.
Federal regulations for water quality testing
and standards do not apply to private well owners. Some states have
limited testing requirements, but many private wells go untested for common
contaminants such as arsenic, a naturally occurring carcinogenic metal; or
nitrate, a fertilizer chemical that can cause cancer and harm developing
babies.
What’s the real solution to safer water?
First find out what’s in your water. Type your
zip code into EWG’s Tap Water Database to find
information on contaminants in your drinking water and their health effects. If
you have a private well, get it tested at least once a year, and consult your
state or local health department about your results.
Once you’ve learned what’s in your water, take
these steps to protect your health:
· Buy a water filter certified to
remove the contaminants found in your tap water.
· Urge your local utility, your state and the
federal government to address pollutants of concern in your tap water.
· Skip the trendy and expensive bottled water.
Instead, use a refillable stainless steel water bottle to transport filtered
tap water.

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