High Levels Of Cancer-Causing Chemical Found In 5 Beverages On Market

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/05/19/health/main1638170.shtml
(AP) A government analysis of more than 100 soft drinks and other beverages turned up five with levels of cancer-causing benzene that exceed federal drinking-water standards, the Food and Drug Administration said Friday.

The companies that make the drinks have been alerted and either have reformulated their products or plan to do so, the FDA said. Government health officials maintain there is no safety concern, an opinion not shared by at least one environmental group.

The five drinks listed by the government were Safeway Select Diet Orange, Crush Pineapple, AquaCal Strawberry Flavored Water Beverage, Crystal Light Sunrise Classic Orange and Giant Light Cranberry Juice Cocktail. The high levels of benzene were found in specific production lots of the drinks, the FDA said.

Benzene, a chemical linked to leukemia, can form in soft drinks containing two ingredients: Vitamin C, also called ascorbic acid, and either of the two preservatives: sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate.

The presence of those ingredients doesn't mean benzene is present. Scientists say factors such as heat or light exposure can trigger a reaction that forms benzene in the beverages.

Federal rules limit benzene levels in drinking water to 5 parts per billion. A limited FDA analysis of store-bought drinks found benzene levels as high as 79 parts per billion in one lot of Safeway Select Diet Orange.

Teena Massingill, manager of corporate public affairs for Safeway, said the company reformulated the drink before the FDA even contacted it.

"We looked at our own product and determined there was reformulation needed on the diet orange soda," Massingill said. "We're quite clear that there is no benzene issue any longer."

Kraft Foods Inc. stopped producing and shipping Crystal Light earlier this year. The company reformulated the product and resumed shipping only after testing showed benzene levels below one part per billion, spokeswoman Elisabeth Wenner said.

Meridian Beverage Co., which makes AquaCal, also reformulated its product, spokesman Bob Hope said. Subsequent company testing found zero benzene, Hope said.

Messages left seeking comment with representatives for Giant Food and Cadbury Schweppes Americas Beverages, the maker of Crush, were not immediately returned.

Dr. Laura Tarantino, director of the FDA's Office of Food Additive Safety, said drinking sodas high in benzene does not pose a health risk.

"This is likely an occasional exposure, it's not a chronic exposure. Obviously, no benzene is something someone wants to have, but the amount of benzene you are getting in a soda is very, very small compared to what you're being exposed to every day from environmental sources," Tarantino said.

However, a spokesman for Environmental Working Group - which has accused the FDA of suppressing information about benzene in soft drinks - saw the results as a problem.

"FDA's test results confirm that there is a serious problem with benzene in soda and juices," said Richard Wiles, senior vice president at Environmental Working Group.

Tarantino said the FDA continued to study how benzene forms, including the role heat plays, and ways of preventing it. The agency plans to continue testing store-bought drinks as well, she added.

A spokesman for the American Beverage Association said the report showed there was no health concern.

"But industry is working diligently to minimize the potential for the formation of benzene to the greatest extent possible. We are trying to push it down to as close as zero as we can get," spokesman Kevin Keane said.
 
I'm surprised this made it into the MSM news coverage. I thought the topic of the slow poisoning of the people in the US via the food, water and air was a subject that was generally avoided by the MSM.
 
Well I think part of the fact that it made it in, was that the soft drinks in question: Select Diet Orange, Crush Pineapple, AquaCal Strawberry Flavored Water Beverage, Crystal Light Sunrise Classic Orange and Giant Light Cranberry Juice Cocktail, aren't exactly name brand, in fact, they don't even give brand names except for Crystal Light and AquaCal.

But I think the important fact is that this stuff can be formed in any soda that contains those magic ingredients: Vitamin C and sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate. These were just the drinks that got busted with it. I'll be making sure I check the ingredients and see if they contain these ingredients, even though I'll drink it anyway.
 
blindpsychic said:
But I think the important fact is that this stuff can be formed in any soda that contains those magic ingredients: Vitamin C and sodium benzoate and potassium benzoate. These were just the drinks that got busted with it. I'll be making sure I check the ingredients and see if they contain these ingredients, even though I'll drink it anyway.
Yes, I agree that this is the main message. Because there is a second thing that is worth pointing out.

From the article :
Federal rules limit benzene levels in drinking water to 5 parts per billion. A limited FDA analysis of store-bought drinks found benzene levels as high as 79 parts per billion in one lot of Safeway Select Diet Orange.
79 parts per billion is an extremely low concentration. And it is only 16 times the excepted limit of 5 parts per billion.

Lead has been replaced by benzene as an aid to increase the rating of gasoline (petrol). We are talking about a concentration of up to 2.5% !!! This is more or less 25 MILLION parts per billion, or 300 THOUSAND times the concentration of benzene in those darn sodas. Of course nobody in his right mind is going to drink gasoline. But benzene is very volatile. It sticks to many materials and can easily penetrate the skin and other materials. As a consequence, the amount of benzene can be dangerously high in busy traffic. However, it turns out that the amount of benzene inside the average modern house is even HIGHER. This is probably due to the use of all sorts of glues, varnish, plastics, (toys for kids!), isolation materials, linoleum, toilet refresher, perfumes and many odours that are used to "refresh" the environment.

Although I will try to avoid any drink that contains benzoates, I think that the amount of benzene is negligible in light of the common routes with which we become contaminated with benzene, i.e. the article is like a tempest in a teapot. And thus, I am not surprised at all that the article made it into msm news coverage. :cool:
 
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