The Great Bottled Water Debate
Boring for natural spring water and government health regulations in the industry.
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"Would you prefer plain, carbonated, boreholed, or natural
spring, sir?"
By Scott Patterson
On November 13, 1995, the FDA, after much delay, published
regulations that will allegedly clean up the bottled water
indus try. A major aspect of the FDA regulations stems from
a practice in which over 50 percent of the bottled water
industry participate—-borehole drilling. Water
obtained from a borehole does not naturally flow from a
spring but rather, like well water, is forcefully sucked
from the ground with hydraulic pumps.
The dilemma before the FDA in November of '95 was this: is
it truthful to label water drilled from a borehole "natural
spring water." The FDA decided that no substantial
difference exists, and as long as the borehole water is
identical to the water that flows from the spring, the
"natural spring water" label may remain.
But is there really no difference between naturally flowing
spring water and borehole water, or do those who actually
market naturally emerging spring water wish to create a
controversy when there essentially is none? Besides having
a rather ominous name, is borehole water safe?
Many hydrogeologists believe that water pumped from
aquifers near springs can change as a result of intense
pressures the suction creates. Boreholes pump out hundreds
of gallons per minute, creating a suction in the
surrounding region which draws water from areas not
associated with the spring. Contaminated ground water can
then enter the borehole area, something that ostensibly
could never happen in a natural spring.
SPRING WATER:
a flow of water rising or issuing naturally from the
earth.
(Oxford English Dictionary)
"By definition the borehole will be shallow," said Dr.
Susan N. Boutros, president of Environmental Associates, in
a letter to the FDA in 1993. "Wells less than fifty feet in
depth," she continues, "and [those] less than 200 feet from
a surface water are considered at risk of surface
contamination."
Bill Sharp, a professor of geology at Penn State, asserts:
"You can create a situation where water from surrounding
areas flows towards the borehole, especially in boreholes
close to the surface, creating the possibility of higher
contaminants." Contaminants such as cryptosparidium and
giardia can enter the aquifer through surface water. There
are no federal stipulations for the appropriate depth of a
borehole.
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