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Tourists visiting India need to know this... specially since the bottles
that package the water themselves cause a huge problem in places like
Goa. FN

---------- Forwarded message ----------

Pure Water or Pure Peril? 

Your bottled water is contaminated by pesticides. Gaping holes in 
regulations and corporate irresponsibility in the fastest growing 
segment of the beverage industry make a mockery of public health 

New Delhi, February 4, 2003: We take it for granted that the bottled 
water we drink is safe. But a Down To Earth exposé, based on tests 
conducted by the Pollution Monitoring Laboratory (PML) of the 
Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) shows otherwise. 

After analysing 17 brands of packaged drinking water sold in and 
around Delhi and 13 brands from the Mumbai region, the CSE lab 
found the samples to contain a deadly cocktail of pesticide residues. 
Most of the samples contained as much as five different pesticide 
residues, in levels far exceeding the standards specified as safe for 
drinking water. 

The samples had enough poison to cause in the long term, cancer, 
liver and kidney damage, disorders of the nervous system, birth 
defects, and disruption of the immune system. Pesticides do not kill 
immediately, but can cause irreparable health disorders as they 
accumulate in the body fat. 

The CSE lab tested for two types of pesticides: organochlorine and 
organophosphorus. The findings were appalling. The four most 
commonly found pesticide residues were lindane, DDT, malathion and 
chlorpyrifos. Using European Economic Commission norms for 
maximum permissible limits for pesticides in packaged water, the CSE 
lab tests of samples from the Delhi region showed that on average, 
each sample contained 36.4 times more pesticides than the stipulated 
levels. The Mumbai samples were a shade better, primarily because 
the source water used by the industry was relatively less contaminated.

CSE used European norms because the standards set for pesticide 
residues by the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) are vague and 
undefined. The standards say, "pesticide residues shall be below 
detectable limits". This, one would assume, means that there ought to 
be no pesticide residues at all in the bottled water. But no, it actually 
means that one should not be able to find the pesticide residues in the 
water. The BIS has specified the methodology for detecting pesticide 
residues and this methodology, which is not very sensitive, does not 
detect pesticides unless present in extremely high quantities.

Even for drinking water, the BIS norms specify that pesticide residues 
should be "absent". What is plainly absurd is that if drinking water 
norms specify that pesticides should not be present, how can 
packaged drinking water norms be so vague, and use a non-
quantifiable phrase, such as "below detectable limits"? Even going by 
drinking water norms, all the bottled water brands tested by the CSE 
lab would fail the test of quality.
What was found:
Top seller Bisleri was third from the bottom, with pesticide 
concentration levels 79 times higher than the stipulated limits (see 
graph on next page). Kinley had concentration levels 14.6 times 
above the maximum permissible amounts. Aquaplus - favoured by the 
Indian Railways - topped the dubious list, crossing the limit by 104 
times!

Contamination levels were significantly lower in packaged natural 
mineral water brands Himalayan and Catch from Himachal Pradesh, a 
state with lower pesticide use.

In the Mumbai region, the worst brand was Oxyrich, with 16.7 times 
higher pesticide concentration levels than the prescribed standards. 
Bisleri and Kinley fared better in the Mumbai samples - they were 
ranked 4th and 5th respectively.

The lab also collected raw water from bottling plants to verify its 
findings. In all cases, tests showed that the pesticides found in the 
source water matched the toxins found in the bottled water - proof 
that the source of the pesticide residues is contaminated groundwater. 
Plants manage to eliminate somewhere between 20 and 80 per cent of 
the residues. But no regulations exist to ensure that bottled water 
plants are set up in clean groundwater zones.

The study is important because of the implications for public health. 
Pesticides ingested in small quantities over time are known to have 
severe effects on the human immune system. What will it take for 
regulatory bodies to tighten controls? Should the bottled water 
industry be allowed to play havoc with public health and breach 
consumer trust?

For the complete Down To Earth magazine story, visit: 
http://www.downtoearth.org.in

To access the complete CSE Lab report, go to: 
http://www.cseindia.org/html/lab/bottled_water_result.htm 
For the press conference presentation, visit: 
http://www.cseindia.org/html/media/media_index.htm
To view this Press Release online, download photographs, or to send 
it to friends, visit: http://www.cseindia.org/html/press_release.htm

If you have questions, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or 
call us: (+91) 9810098142


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         CENTRE FOR SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT  ( CSE )
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