1700 Diagonal Road, Suite
650
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 703-683-5213
Fax: 703-683-4074
Web:
www.bottledwater.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
Gwen Majette-Haynes
May
3, 2001 703-683-5213
WWF
STUDY IS ALL WET: LONG ON RHETORIC…SHORT ON FACTS
International
Bottled Water Association’s Response to
The WWF Study,
Bottled Water: Understanding a Social
Phenomenon
IBWA Available for Interviews
ALEXANDRIA, VA-- The bottled water industry
– like the WWF -- strongly believes that cleaning up and protecting the world’s
water resources should be a global priority. It is essential to the survival of
both our planet and our industry.
Unfortunately, the WWF has elected to attack the bottled water industry
–not the problem itself.
In
an attempt to draw attention to the need to clean up the world’s water
resources, the WWF has chosen to pit tap water against bottled water, while
offering no meaningful solutions to the problem. Regardless of whether water comes from the
tap or from a bottle, the world should demand it be clean, safe and available
for future generations.
The
fact is, people are increasingly choosing bottled
water because of its consistent high quality, safety, taste and convenience.
WWF
makes a number of factual misrepresentations.
Here are the easily verifiable facts:
- In the United States, the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) regulates bottled water as a packaged food product
with standards that must, by law, be at least as protective of public
health – and in some cases – more stringent than the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) regulations for tap. It is also regulated at the state level
with regulations that typically reference those of FDA or are analogous to
them. IBWA also maintains its own
mandatory set of standards through the IBWA Model Code for its members
that are, in many cases, stricter than FDA’s.
- Bottled water is one of
only four packaged food products with its own set of FDA-mandated Good
Manufacturing Practices that requires a bottling process that uses food
grade equipment in a food manufacturing facility. Infant formula is among the others in a
select group of packaged food products subject to this higher standard.
- Bottled water has an
outstanding safety record. The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has never
confirmed an outbreak in the United States of illness or disease
linked to bottled water.
- Bottlers add value and
protection to bottled water products by employing a Multi-Barrier Approach
for safety and quality, including steps such as source protection and
monitoring, reverse osmosis, deionization, ultraviolet light,
distillation, micron filtration, and ozonation. If municipal water is used as a source
for bottled water, it typically undergoes additional processing and
purification for quality, safety and taste.
- On the international
front, the CODEX Alimentarius Commission on July
1, 2001 will approve a Code of Hygienic Practice for Bottled/Packaged
Water and a General Standard for Bottled/Packaged Water. CODEX Alimentarius Commission is the
worldwide food standards body under the World Health Organization (WHO).
-- more –
IBWA Statement on WWF (May
3, 2001) – Page 2-2
- All bottled water
packaging is recyclable and the industry is an outspoken advocate of
recycling. In the home and
office/water cooler sector, bottles are captured at an exceptional rate,
where they are collected, cleaned and sanitized, reused up to 100 times
and, after their usable life, properly recycled into other consumer
products.
WWF’s
Richard Holland is quoted as saying, “Our attitudes towards tap water are being
shaped by the pollution, which is choking the rivers and streams, which should
be veins of life. We must clean up and
properly protect these waters at the source, and not just at the treatment works,
so that we can all rest easy in drinking from the tap.” IBWA and its members embrace that position
one hundred percent and note that promoting negative misinformation about
bottled water does absolutely nothing to advance this vital goal.
# # #
The International Bottled
Water Association (IBWA) is the authoritative source of information about all
types of bottled waters. Founded in
1958, IBWA member companies account for more than 80 percent of all bottled water
sales in the U.S. IBWA's membership includes U.S. and international bottlers,
distributors and suppliers. IBWA is
committed to working with state and federal governments, in concert with the
IBWA Model Code, to set stringent bottled water standards for safe, high quality
products. Consumers can contact IBWA at
1-800-WATER-11 or log onto IBWA's web site (www.bottledwater.org) for more
information about bottled water and a list of members' brands. Media inquiries
can be directed to Gwen Majette-Haynes at 703-683-5213.