Stricter labeling urged for bottled water
By
EMILY FREDRIX, AP Food Industry Writer Emily Fredrix, Ap Food Industry Writer –
Wed Jul 8, 7:41 pm ET
Consumers know less about the water they pay dearly for in bottles than
what they can drink almost for free from the tap because the two are regulated differently, congressional investigators and
nonprofit researchers say in new reports.
Both the Government Accountability Office
and the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit research and advocacy
organization, recommend in reports released Wednesday that bottled water be labeled with the same level of information
municipal water providers must disclose.
The researchers urged Americans to make bottled water "a distant second
choice" to filtered tap water because there isn't enough information about bottled water. The working group recommends
purifying tap water with a commercial filter, however.
Both reports were released at a congressional subcommittee
Wednesday morning.
Bottled water — an industry worth about $16 billion in sales
last year — has been suffering lately as colleges, communities and some governments take measures to limit or ban its
consumption. As employers, they are motivated by cost savings and environmental concern because the bottles often are not
recycled.
Bottled water sales were growing by double-digit percentages for years and
were helping buoy the U.S. beverage industry overall. But they were flat last year, according to trade publication Beverage
Digest.
Beverage Digest editor John Sicher said some consumers are turning on the tap during the recession simply
because it's cheaper.
From 1997 to 2007, the amount of bottled water consumed per person in the U.S. more than
doubled, from 13.4 gallons to 29.3 gallons, the GAO report said.
The issue before a subcommittee of the Energy and
Commerce Committee was less about waste and water quality concerns and more about the mechanics
of regulating bottled water.
As a food product, bottled water is regulated by the Food and
Drug Administration and required to show nutrition information and ingredients on its labels. Municipal water is under
the control of the Environmental Protection Agency.
The two agencies have similar
standards for water quality, but the FDA has less authority to enforce them, the GAO said,
and the environmental agency requires much more testing.
Subcommittee chairman Rep. Bart
Stupak, D-Mich., said the subcommittee was requesting information Wednesday from a dozen bottled
water companies on their water sources, treatment methods and two years' results
of contaminant testing. It was not immediately clear which companies were being contacted.
"Consumers may not
realize that many regulations that apply to municipalities responsible for tap water do not apply to companies that produce
bottled water," he said in statements opening the hearing.
The GAO noted the FDA has yet to set standards for
DEHP, one of several chemicals known as phthalates that are found in many household products,
while the EPA limits the presence of phthalates in tap water.
In a survey of officials in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, the GAO found they think consumers are misinformed about bottled water.
"Many replied that consumers often believe that bottled water is safer or healthier than tap water," according
to the GAO report.
The Washington, D.C.-based Environmental Working Group said in
its report that consumers do not get enough information to determine which water is best for them.
Both groups said
some bottled water brands include the same information required of tap water providers on either labels or company Web sites.
The GAO called for more research but said the FDA should start by requiring that bottled water labels tell consumers
where to find out more.
Community water systems must distribute annual reports about their water's source, contaminants
and possible health concerns.
Consumers should know where all their water comes from, how it is treated and what
is found in it, said Richard Wiles, senior vice president for policy and communications for the Environmental Working Group.
"If the municipal tap water systems can tell their customers this information, you would think that bottled
water companies that charge 1,000 times more for this water could also let consumers know the same thing," he
told The Associated Press.
The bottled water industry's trade group, the International Bottled Water Association, planned to testify Wednesday that the product, —
subject to the same regulation as other soft drinks, teas, juices and other beverages —
is safe. Additional standards apply for bottled water products labeled as "purified water"
or "spring water," among other labels, because they must prove a connection to those sources, according to planned
testimony from Joseph Doss, president and chief executive of the International Bottled Water Association.
Doss said
consumers can learn about bottled water by contacting the company, reading its Web site and visiting sites run by state governments.
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