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Bottled water is the most popular consumed drink in the United States according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Those in support of bottled water claim it's convenient, safer and better-tasting than unfiltered tap water.
Numerous studies and investigations dispute that bottled water is safer than tap water. And there is no dispute that filtered tap water is much more affordable, safe alternative than expensive bottled water.
Studies have shown in just one serving of bottle water there are tens of thousands of micro plastics contained in each bottle.
Do you really know what you are getting with bottled water? The truth is, there’s a good chance that fancy water you’ve just forked over a buck for, comes from a city or municipal water supply.


Bisphenol A (BPA) is a chemical that Big Industry uses to stabilize epoxy resins and polycarbonate plastics or hard plastics. It is also used in softer plastics to prevent cracking.
What does that have to do with your drinking water? It’s important to know that the plastic used for bottled water often contains BPA. It’s known to leach into the water when exposed to heat, which in turn creates “faux estrogen” or what is also known as bad estrogen.
High levels of circulating bad estrogen is recognized as a cause of ovarian, prostate, and breast cancers.
Bottle Water! In a trailblazing study, researchers have discovered bottled water sold in stores can contain 10 to 100 times more bits of plastic than previously estimated — nanoparticles so infinitesimally tiny they cannot be seen under a microscope.
The researchers found that, on average, a liter of bottled water included about 240,000 tiny pieces of plastic. About 90% of these plastic fragments were nanoplastics. This total was 10 to 100 times more plastic particles than seen in earlier studies, which mostly focused on larger microplastics
At 1,000th the average width of a human hair, nanoplastics are so teeny, they can migrate through the tissues of the digestive tract or lungs into the bloodstream, distributing potentially harmful synthetic chemicals throughout the body and into cells, experts say.
One liter of water — the equivalent of two standard-size bottled waters — contained an average of 240,000 plastic particles from seven types of plastics, of which 90% were identified as nanoplastics and the rest were microplastics, according to the study
Nanoplastics are the most worrisome type of plastic pollution for human health, experts say. That’s because the minuscule particles can invade individual cells and tissues in major organs, potentially interrupting cellular processes and depositing endocrine-disrupting chemicals such as bisphenols, phthalates, flame retardants, per- and polyfluorinated substances, or PFAS, and heavy metals.
Click on the below links for more information about the micro and nano plastics you are consuming when you drink Bottled Water!

