Given US’s standing in terms of holding corporations accountable and their poor standards and lower regulations around the sourcing I’m going to assume this isn’t the case for the rest of the world.
They were the only 3 they looked at. It’s not about them being sub par quality, they measured for smaller nano plastics than have been tested before. I would assume all plastic containers do this, with a rate of speed relative to the medium contained within. All drinks with plastic, maybe the carbonated drinks move the plastic particles faster, even. How much of the food we consume is wrapped in plastic, and doing this.
3 different brand in the US.
Given US’s standing in terms of holding corporations accountable and their poor standards and lower regulations around the sourcing I’m going to assume this isn’t the case for the rest of the world.
They were the only 3 they looked at. It’s not about them being sub par quality, they measured for smaller nano plastics than have been tested before. I would assume all plastic containers do this, with a rate of speed relative to the medium contained within. All drinks with plastic, maybe the carbonated drinks move the plastic particles faster, even. How much of the food we consume is wrapped in plastic, and doing this.
I guess that’s why the USA has the biggest rate of obesity
What does that have to do with bottled water?
It’s not even true, Nauru has the highest rate. The US is 11th (granted, after a bunch of micro-states in Polynesia). You may mean highest population
https://blackdoctor.org/bpa-linked-to-belly-fat-obesity/
BPA isn’t in water bottles