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The largest source of plastic ingestion is drinking water, says new WWF report on microplastics
The largest source of plastic ingestion is drinking water, says new WWF report on microplastics

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Global WWF study reveals humans ingest massive amounts of microplastics, equivalent to eating a credit card a week, prompting call for global action from Bluewater

Stockholm, Sweden, June 12, 2019 – Bluewater, a global leader in water purification technology and solutions, today called on governments around the world to urgently tackle plastic pollution. The Bluewater call to action came in response to a new WWF study called 'Assessing Plastic Ingestion from Nature to People', which reports that humans are ingesting microplastics on massive level from the water they drink, the food they eat and the air they breathe, ingesting an average 5 grams of plastic per week, which is the equivalent of one credit card.

“The alarming fact is that the WWF study says the largest source of plastic ingestion is drinking water with plastic found in groundwater, tap water and bottled water all over the world,” said Bluewater founder and CEO Bengt Rittri.

Mr. Rittri (pictured below) said governments around the world need to learn urgent lessons from the WWF report and he called on them to unite to take ‘urgent and immediate action’ to slow and halt the global spread of microplastics.

He noted how the WWF report confirmed findings reported in a recent Bluewater White Paper entitled ‘The Global Plastic Calamity’ that spelled out how toxins from ingested plastic have also been shown to harm breeding and impair immune systems.

The WWF report, which is the result of a study by the University of Newcastle in Australia, spotlights the ways plastic enters our bodies as a result of ever-increasing plastic use and limited recycling. Saying the world has produced as much plastic since 2000 as all the preceding years combined, WWF reports that a third of all plastic is leaked into nature, amounting to 100 million metric tons of plastic waste in 2016 alone.

Anders Jacobson n(photo below), co-founder and CEO of Blue, the impact led investment company that owns Bluewater together with a list of other sustainability-focused companies, called for research into the health effects of plastic ingestion on humans to be urgently accelerated.

“Bluewater purification technology and the solutions delivered for private individuals, businesses and public water dispensing tackle the contamination problem at point of use, removing the likes of microplastics and lead from drinking and bathing water, but to avoid a catastrophic health emergency we also must tackle the root of the problem, unfettered pollution of our world by plastics,” Jacobson said.

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For more information, please contact David Noble, PR & Communications Director, at david.noble@bluewatergroup.com or +44 7785 302 694

Bluewater

Honored in 2019 with two Fast Company World Changing Ideas Awards and a 2019 K&B Kitchen Innovation of the Year Award, Bluewater helps people and businesses to benefit from cleaner, healthier tap water generated by the company’s state-of-the-art water purifiers innovated with love in Sweden that remove virtually all pollutants, from toxic metals and chemicals to microplastics. www.bluewatergroup.com

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David Noble

David Noble

Press contact PR & Communications Director Public relations and corporate communications +44 7785 302 694

Bluewater innovates, manufactures and commercializes globally a complete range of premium reverse osmosis water purifiers for residential, business and public use

Bluewater is a world leader innovating, manufacturing, and commercializing water purification technologies and solutions for residential, business and public dispensing applications. Bluewater harnesses patented reverse osmosis technology to remove 99.97% of pollutants from water, including lead, bacteria, pesticides, medical residues, chlorine, microplastics and lime-scale. www.bluewatergroup.com

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114 26 Stockholm
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