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Listen to this siteThursday 15 August 2002
Bottled water legislation is changing. In December 2003, a reduction in the permitted levels of antimony, arsenic, bromate and nickel will come into force to better protect consumers.
Key Facts
Summary
Legislation, currently in draft, which sets new limits for antimony, arsenic, bromate and nickel in bottled waters will come into force on 25th December 2003.
This report describes the findings of a survey carried out in April, looking at bottled waters collected between October 2001 and February 2002, to investigate the levels of antimony, arsenic, bromate and nickel in the water and to determine compliance with current and proposed limits.
The maximum concentrations of antimony and nickel detected were 4.2 and 9.6 micrograms per litre, respectively. Both of these values are below existing and future limits.
The concentrations of arsenic ranged from below the limit of detection up to 59.7 micrograms per litre. This highest value was found in a single sample. All remaining samples contained less than 25 micrograms per litre, well below the current limit (50 micrograms per litre). Seven samples, when taking measurement uncertainty into account, contained arsenic at levels greater than 10 micrograms per litre, the limit that will apply from 25 December 2003.
As with the other parameters, bromate analysis was carried out at two laboratories. Although two samples contained measurable levels of bromate at both laboratories, a further 8 samples contained bromate at above the limit of detection in measurements from one laboratory. A single sample was identified as being above the future limit of 10 micrograms per litre.
No current levels were exceeded. Where a future limit was exceeded, the manufacturer was informed. The manufacturers concerned did not want to comment on the data.
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