Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Soft Drinks Found to Have High Levels of Benzene (cancer Chemical)

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0302-07.htm

 

 

 

Published on Thursday, March 2, 2006 by the Times / UK

 

Soft Drinks Found to Have High Levels of Benzene

(Cancer Chem)

by Rajeev Syal

 

Traces of a carcinogenic chemical have been found in soft drinks

at 8 times the level permitted in drinking water, it was revealed last

night.

Tests conducted on 230 drinks on sale in Britain and France

have identified high levels of Benzene, a compound known

to cause cancer, according to the Food Standards Agency.

There is a legal limit of one part per billion of benzene in British

drinking water. The latest tests revealed levels of up to

eight parts per billion in some soft drinks.

 

Benzene has been linked to leukaemia and other cancers of the blood.

Traces found in Perrier water 15 years ago led

to the withdrawal of more than 160 million bottles worldwide.

The disclosure has prompted food safety campaigners to demand

that the Government reveal which products contain benzene.

At present, the drinks' identities have not been revealed.

 

Richard Watts, of Sustain, a pressure group lobbying for better food

standards, said that this should be done urgently because the drinks

were being marketed to children. " The scientific evidence is unclear

about whether there is any safe level of benzene. We see no reason

why it should be different from the designated safe level in drinking

water.

If it is unsafe in drinking water, why should it be safe in soft

drinks? " he said.

 

The Food Standards Agency, the government watchdog,

said that the products did not pose an immediate health risk,

but called for further investigation from the British drinks industry.

" Let's have further investigations and regular discussions with

the drinks industry to check what is happening. If levels are high

then the

FSA will take action to protect consumers, " an agency spokesman said.

 

Food scientists believe that high levels of benzene may have been

produced by the reaction of two commonly used ingredients

— sodium benzoate, a preservative, and ascorbic acid (vitamin C).

Sodium benzoate is widely used in the drinks sector.

 

In Britain, it is used in Britvic brands including

Britvic 55 apple and orange flavours,

Pennine Spring flavoured waters and

Shandy Bass.

 

It is not known if any of these products were included in the latest

tests.

A spokesman for Britvic has previously expressed confidence in its

products.

A spokesman for the British Soft Drinks Association said yesterday

that the industry was working to reduce the levels of benzene in soft

drinks.

 

" There is an obligation on the industry to have as low a level of benzene

as possible and we are looking at ways of reducing the levels

— and maybe even removing the preservative

— if we can replace it with something else, " he said.

When minuscule traces of benzene were discovered in Perrier water

15 years ago, it forced the French company to withdraw millions of

bottles.

 

Tests have been carried out in Europe after US food watchdogs

found benzene in juices and sodas. The Food and Drug Administration

registered its concern about the possible long-term effects on health.

 

Professor Glenn Lawrence, of Long Island University,

who first conducted tests for benzene in soft drinks 13 years ago,

said that the combination of sodium benzoate

and vitamin C was commonly used in drinks in the early 1990s.

 

He said that drinks firms were now putting vitamin C

back into drinks to encourage consumers to buy the product.

He said that this was being done to encourage parents to buy the drinks

to improve their children's health but it might just be doing the

opposite.

 

BENZENE FACTS

 

Michael Faraday discovered benzene in 1825 when he isolated it

from oil gas to form a chemical, six parts carbon, six parts hydrogen

It is produced during incomplete combustion of carbon-rich substances:

it is produced from petrochemicals, but occurs naturally

— in volcanoes,— forest fires and in — cigarette smoke

In the 19th and early 20th centuries it was used in aftershave,

for its pleasant smell, and to decaffinate coffee.

It is now used as an anti-knock agent in petrol

It is an aggressive carcinogen and may lead to leukaemia

and other cancers of the blood

 

In 1993, Professor Glenn Lawrence, of Long Island University,

published research showing that the sodium benzoate

and vitamin C found in soft drinks could react to form benzene.

He suggested that drink companies were putting vitamin C

into drinks to encourage customers to buy them

 

Copyright 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...