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A big swig of plastic: the issue with cheap water bottles

Michael Restin
8/12/2022
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

High-quality drinking bottles are a dime a dozen. But sports grounds and gymnasiums are generally dominated by the unbreakable plastic kind. They’re handed out for free everywhere – together with a bunch of chemical residues.

And it’s not like we don’t have a ton of alternatives sitting in our cupboard. But nothing breeds quite as quickly as plastic bottles. They’re handed out at nearly every tournament, vacation camp and other events as cheap giveaways adorned with the sponsor’s logo.

Unbreakable, unpalatable?

Nothing conclusive

One problem that’s arisen is that the search for potential pollutants is like looking for a needle in a haystack. Plus, nobody knows what the needle looks like. Or how many needles there are. After all, so many different chemical substances are used in the production process of the bottles that detecting them can prove difficult.

Softeners and other agents in the water

Avoid the dishwasher

Putting the water bottles in the dishwasher at 65 degrees only exacerbated the problem by adding soap residue to the list. Over 3,500 compounds were identified as residues after one cycle in the dishwasher. Even after the bottles were subsequently rinsed out several times by hand, 430 of the residues continued to end up in the «fresh» water. At least in the plastic bottles.

While repeated rinsing removed almost all residues from the glass bottles used in the test, some could not be shifted from the plastic bottles. In addition, the heat at work in the wash cycle probably transported other plastic compounds into the water.

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Simple writer and dad of two who likes to be on the move, wading through everyday family life. Juggling several balls, I'll occasionally drop one. It could be a ball, or a remark. Or both.


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