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Dear EarthTalk: I am very concerned about the amount of chlorine in my tap water. I called my water company and they said it is safe just let the tap run for awhile to rid the smell of the chlorine. But that just gets rid of the smell, perhaps, not the chlorine? -- Anita Frigo, Milford, CT
Thousands
of American municipalities add chlorine to their drinking
water to get rid of contaminants like nitrates, arsenic and
pesticides. But this inexpensive and highly effective disinfectant
has a dark side. Chlorine, added as an inexpensive and
effective drinking water disinfectant, is also a known poison
to the body, says Vanessa Lausch of filter manufacturer
Aquasana. It is certainly no coincidence that chlorine
gas was used with deadly effectiveness as a weapon in the
First World War. The gas would severely burn the lungs
and other body tissues when inhaled, and is no less powerful
when ingested by mouth.
Lausch adds that researchers have now linked chlorine in
drinking water to higher incidences of bladder, rectal and
breast cancers. Reportedly chlorine, once in water, interacts
with organic compounds to create trihalomethanes (THMs)which
when ingested encourage the growth of free radicals that can
destroy or damage vital cells in the body. Because so
much of the water we drink ends up in the bladder and/or rectum,
ingestions of THMs in drinking water are particularly damaging
to these organs, says Lausch.
The link between chlorine and bladder and rectal cancers has
long been known, but only recently have researchers found
a link between common chlorine disinfectant and breast cancer,
which affects one out of every eight American women. A recent
study conducted in Hartford, Connecticut found that women
with breast cancer have 50-60 percent higher levels of organochlorines
(chlorine by-products) in their breast tissue than cancer-free
women.
But dont think that buying bottled water is any solution.
Much of the bottled water for sale in the U.S. comes from
public municipal water sources that are often treated with,
you guessed it, chlorine. A few cities have switched over
to other means of disinfecting their water supplies. Las Vegas,
for example, has followed the lead of many European and Canadian
cities in switching over to harmless ozone instead of chlorine
to disinfect its municipal water supply.
As for getting rid of the chlorine that your city or town
adds to its drinking water on your own, theories abound. Some
swear by the method of letting their water sit for 24 hours
so that the chlorine in the glass or pitcher will off-gas.
Letting the tap run for a while is not likely to remove any
sizable portion of chlorine, unless one were to then let the
water sit overnight before consuming it. Another option is
a product called WaterYouWant, which looks like sugar but
actually is composed of tasteless antioxidants and plant extracts.
The manufacturer claims that a quick shake of the stuff removes
100 percent of the chlorine (and its odor) from a glass a
tap water. A years supply of WaterYouWant retails for under
$30.
Of course, an easier way to get rid of chlorine from your
tap water is by installing a carbon-based filter, which absorbs
chlorine and other contaminants before they get into your
glass or body. Tap-based filters from the likes of Paragon,
Aquasana, Kenmore, Seagul and others remove most if not all
of the chlorine in tap water, and are relatively inexpensive
to boot.
FURTHER READING:
Aquasana, www.aquasana.com;
WaterYouWant, www.wateryouwant.com.
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