How does it compare to water running through plastic pex pipes in your house?

Never mind the plastic pipes in your home, there’s nothing filtering the water from the treatment plant to your tap. Literally kilometres worth of pipes that haven’t been cleaned in years or decades that your tap water is running through.

Not to mention that municipal water in Canada can be tainted with high levels of lead..

Bottled water may have “plastic particles”, but some brands put their bottled water through reverse osmosis filtering, so it’s way cleaner than your tap water.

And I am NOT advocating for drinking plastic bottled water, simply pointing out that tap water isn’t really “clean” once it reaches your home. I filter all the water I consume.

Rentlar
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I probably get chunks of rusted steel in my water…

Pxtl
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Bring back copper pipes.

Drink bottle water and consume plastic particles… drink tap water and get all the other contaminants (places I travel for work outside of Canada have highly contaminated and unsafe water… so water with bits of plastic are the lesser evil).

@mrbn@lemmy.ca
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I wouldnt be so quick to blame all of this on water bottles when a high percentage of all the food we consume is packaged in plastic and also the left overs sitting in the fridge.

What do those have to do with microplastics found in bottled water?

@mrbn@lemmy.ca
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I am commenting on this section of the article:

“We and others have shown that these nanoplastics can be internalized into cells and we know that nanoplastics carry all kinds of chemical additives that could cause cell stress, DNA damage and change metabolism or cell function.”

Somarelli said his own, yet-to-be-published work has found more than 100 “known cancer-causing chemicals in these plastics.”

And also

What’s disturbing, said University of Toronto evolutionary biologist Zoie Diana, is that “small particles can appear in different organs and may cross membranes that they aren’t meant to cross, such as the blood-brain barrier.”

My point being that it’s unlikely that bottled water is the only source of these plastics.

Neither of the quotes you supplied make that claim.

@person@lemm.ee
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I do not have a point that needs sourcing. The article quite simply does not discuss other sources of microplastics. It does not dismiss them either.

edit: Allow me to elaborate a little less formally. OP’s initial comment straight up sounds like whatabaoutism by Big Bottled Water. It dismisses the microplastics in water bottles, pointing to other sources of microplastics. OP then claims that the article dismisses other sources, failing to provide any relevant quotes. Have I gone insane?

Or you could just buy food from the produce section without plastic…

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