Green Guru: How Safe Are BPA Alternatives?

Green Guru: How Safe Are BPA Alternatives?

Alternatives to BPA may not be as safe as you think, so choose wisely. 

By Susan Cosier
Published: May-June 2012

How safe are alternatives to BPA?

—Polly Andrews, Austin, TX

The furor over the hormone-disrupting chemical bisphenol A has spurred numerous companies to find substitutes to take its place in products from plastic baby bottles to soup cans. BPA has been shown to leach into our food and drinks and may cause a host of human health problems; it’s also widespread in the environment and has been detected in water and soil. One study showed that when participants drank from polycarbonate bottles for one week, BPA exposure increased by two-thirds. Yet the alternatives may not be any safer. “ ‘BPA free’ is perhaps the best and worst thing that has happened,” says Patricia Hunt, a Washington State University biologist. “It’s good because it has raised consumer awareness. It’s bad because not all BPA-free plastics are free of compounds related to this nasty actor.”

Industry has tweaked the molecule, in many instances, to create BPS or BPF, which could be as bad as or even worse than the original villain. They haven’t been scrutinized as heavily as BPA, says Pete Myers, CEO and chief scientist for Environmental Health Sciences. Under existing laws, companies can introduce chemicals to the marketplace without providing any safety data (unless they’re pesticides or come in contact with food), and the government bears the burden of proving that a substance is toxic.

There are other alternatives like cardboard beverage cartons, which actually have several layers that include aluminum and plastic. But very little information about their chemical make-up is publicly available, says Jane Muncke, an environmental risk assessment specialist. 

At the very least, consider swapping out plastic containers for one of these alternatives: glass, stainless steel, or aluminum, experts say. Dr. Brown’s and Evenflo sell glass baby bottles, and Klean Kanteen offers stainless steel water bottles. You can order them online or find them at your local grocery store. Sip safely.  

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Susan Cosier

Susan Cosier is a senior editor at Audubon magazine. Follow her on Twitter @susancosier.

Type: Author | From: Audubon Magazine

Comments

BPA-Epoxy Pipe Lining Alternative

Epoxy water pipe relining is "out of sight-out of mind". The City of Regina Canada is an example of poor engineering techniques to supply water without fully understanding the products or even basic chemistry (http://www.regina.ca/press/news-and-announcements/city-of-regina-and-min...). Regina, Can is a good example of going from a carcinogen to a mutagen alternative and ignorance is no excuse for public safety (Save a penny and spend $2 million). Cured-In-Place Pipe (CIPP) technology is supplying lining systems in our water lines without monitoring and actual installed testing results. Profits over public safety? Same marketing techniques as the asbestos-cement pipe? The municipalities must test for specific chemicals and have penalties imposed for non-compliance. The US water infrastructure also supports relining with BPA because of the non-odor and meets NSF testing. FDA tests are obsolete in water distribution because BPA linings would fail to meet the requirements. Styrene resins for this application is marketed as Non-Toxic (according to CIPP sales forces). Producers of Epoxy resin and curing agents will readily admit that they would not drink water from any pipe lined with "their products". A classic case of "NIMBY" Not In My Back-Yard!

Reusable Water Bottles - BPA Free

The aluminum Hello Green Tomorrow Water Bottle is BPA free, costs only $6 and ALL proceeds are donated to help end deforestation
http://shop.avon.com/shop/product.aspx?pf_id=41493

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