Drinking water contains more than 2,100 toxic
chemicals that can cause cancer.
--Ralph Nader Research Institute
The following report summarizes factual
information on tap water quality and the effects of tap
water on human health. For information on bottled water
quality and the misconceptions surrounding it, refer to
the lifestyle tab above.
Our hope is that you will take a moment to review this
valuable information and consider the facts. We are not
trying to scare you, we are only trying to inform you of
the threats to our environment and health that became
the driving force behind the formation of our company.
Increased awareness of this serious issue can only
benefit us all.
We also hope that you will review the product
information about Aquasana Pure Water Systems, the
highest-rated home water filtration products in America.
After reading this page you can tour the rest of our
site for additional topics of interest or visit the
product
catalog for great savings on Aquasana purchases.
Once you have all the facts, the decision is easy. Even
if you don't buy one of our water filters, please buy a
water filter. There is no such thing as a bad water
filter. Thank you for coming this far!
The causes of tap water contamination are many,
ranging from agricultural runoff to improper use of
household chemicals and everything in between. Few of us
realize the extent or impact of these low level
synthetic chemicals in the water we use. While the
standard use in our society of over 80,000 different
synthetic chemicals has led to added convenience and
productivity in our lives, these come at a tremendous
price... drastic increases in degenerative disease.
In the early 1900s, before the prevalence of
chlorine, pesticides, herbicides and the tens of
thousands of other chemicals that we are exposed to
every day, the average American had a 1 in 50 chance of
getting cancer, today one out of three people can expect
to get cancer in their lifetime, one out of two males.
Our use of man-made chemicals has become so extreme
that we can now find traces of these low level SOCs
(synthetic organic chemicals) in virtually every public
water supply around the world. A recent report by the
Ralph Nader Study Group, after a review of over 10,000
documents acquired through the Freedom of Information
Act, confirmed that "U.S. drinking water contains
more than 2,100 toxic chemicals that can cause cancer."
We've learned that any chemical we use in our society
will eventually wind up in our water supply. There is no
"new" water! Our planet reuses the same water over and
over. And as our use of SOCs increases, so does the
toxicity of our water. Earth's natural filtration
process is not effective at removing these toxic SOCs,
nor is municipal water treatment. Industry, agriculture
and individuals all contribute to the problem. Many of
the contaminants found in water can be traced back to
improper or excessive use of ordinary compounds like
lawn chemicals, gasoline, dry-cleaning solvents and
cleaning products.
Once we realize that everything that goes down the
drain, on our lawns, on our agricultural fields or into
the environment by any means eventually winds up in the
water we drink, we begin to see just how vulnerable our
water supply really is.
Our municipal water treatment facilities do
not remove SOCs and typically consist only of
sand bed filtration and disinfection, like a standard
swimming pool filter. For the most part, today's water
treatment facilities are much the same as they were at
the turn of the last century: they filter out the
visible particles and add bleach!
"Drinking water plants are old and out of date,
and water supplies are increasingly threatened by and
contaminated by chemicals and microorganisms.,"
Natural Resources Defense Council.
"The way we guarantee safe drinking water is
broken and needs to be fixed," Carol Browner, U.S. EPA
chief.
One of America's leading authorities on water
contamination, Dr. David Ozonoff of the Boston
University School of Public Health states, "The risk
of disease associated with public drinking water has
passed from the theoretical to the real."
Many illnesses that in the past could not be linked
to a probable cause have now been linked to toxins in
our drinking water.
"While levels of these carcinogens (SOCs) in
drinking water are low, it is precisely these low levels
that carcinogenists believe to be responsible for the
majority of human cancers in the U.S.,"
U.S. Council on Environmental Quality.
The use of pesticides and herbicides has become so
excessive that they are now commonly found in household
tap water and bottled water with
alarming frequency.
A 1998 study of 29 major U.S. cities by the
Environmental Working Group found that all 29 cities had
traces of at least one weed killer in the drinking
water. The report titled "Weed Killers by the Glass"
went on to say that "millions of Americans are
routinely exposed to one or more pesticides in a single
glass of tap water."
These first ever tap water testings found two or more
pesticides in the drinking water of 27 of the 29 cities,
three or more in 24 cities, four or more in 21 cities,
five or more in 18 cities, six or more in 13 cities, and
seven or more in the tap water of five major U.S.
cities. In Fort Wayne, Indiana, nine different
pesticides were found in a single glass of tap water!
As a startling side note, it was reported that in
these 29 cities, 45,000 infants drank formula mixed with
tap water containing weed killers and that "over half
of these infants were swallowing four to nine chemicals
in every bottle!"
The tragic health effects of consuming these highly
toxic chemicals are magnified many times over for small
children because their systems are more sensitive and
still developing. Small children also consume a much
larger volume of fluids per pound of body weight and
therefore get a bigger dose, yet none of these factors
are considered when the EPA's maximum contaminant levels
are set. The National Academy of Sciences issued a
report in 1993 on this subject, stating
"children are not little adults"
and their bodies are less developed and simply incapable
of detoxifying certain harmful compounds.
Another major flaw in the estimated risks of
chemicals in our drinking water is the false assumption
that only one chemical is being consumed. The
regulations are set based on what is assumed safe for a
175-pound adult drinking water with only one chemical
present and do not take into account the combined
toxicity of two or more chemicals.
In a 1995 Science Advisory Report to the EPA, it was
stated that "when two or more of these contaminants
combine in our water, the potency may be increased as
much as 1,000 times!"
It has been shown that areas with the highest levels
of SOCs in their water supplies also have the highest
incidence of cancer.
Jacquelyn Warren of the Natural Resources Defense
Council commented on the subject, "The one thing we
know for sure about toxins in our drinking water is that
the more we look, the more we find."
|