In a stunning turn of events, Health Canada is calling bisphenol A a dangerous substance.
What's bisphenol A (BPA)? It's a very useful chemical that unfortunately is bad for us. In fact:
"Independent researchers in dozens of studies have linked trace BPA exposures in animal and test-tube experiments to conditions involving hormone imbalances, including breast and prostate cancer, early puberty and changes in brain structure, particularly for exposures during key points of fetal or early neonatal development." (source)
I call the announcement stunning because it will cause major disruptions in industry to switch away from it. Given that the current Canadian administration is the very pro business Conservatives, I'm frankly shocked that they allowed this to happen. It must have slipped through somehow :) Good on them, though.
What To Do
- Toss out your hard, clear, plastic water bottles, and stop drinking bottled water from the types of bottles pictured at left. In fact, don't drink bottled water at all - Edmonton has world-class water coming out of the taps.
- Buy non-leaching water bottles from Earth's General Store or Mountain Equipment Co-op
- Cut down on canned food:
"Independent laboratory tests found a toxic food-can lining ingredient [BPA] associated with birth defects of the male and female reproductive systems in over half of 97 cans of name-brand fruit, vegetables, soda, and other commonly eaten canned goods. (source)"
- When you do open a can, make it an Eden can:
"Eden Organic Beans are packed in lead free, tin covered, steel cans coated with a baked on oleoresinous (a natural mixture of an oil and a resin extracted from various plants, such as pine or balsam fir) c-enamel lining, that does not contain bisphenol-A. These cans cost 14% more than the industry standard cans, which do contain bisphenol-A (source)."
- Learn about the good versus bad plastics
- Follow the green news. I learned about Bisphenol A five years ago when I read about it in WorldWatch Magazine. The government is always years behind, so be proactive and learn about possible health effects when the scientists do, not when the government finally decides to intervene.
Hey Conrad,
I referred a CBC interview to CELAP on bisphenol-A, but you could've taken it too, right? That'd be profile for greenedmonton.ca, eh? Doing interviews as Conrad N, from greenedmonton.ca?
Yeah, I think so. I'm still really nervous about doing media, though. It's something I hope to overcome someday.
Within hours of posting this piece, Google was sending people who searched "bisphenol A Edmonton". Amazing, that Google.
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