June 10, 2008 - BPA Risk Too High, Markey Proposes 100% Ban in Food, Drink Containers
WASHINGTON –Representative Edward J. Markey (D-MA), a senior member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee with oversight over the Department of Health and Human Services, will introduce the “Ban Poisonous Additives (BPA)” Act today to prohibit the use of the chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) in all food and beverage containers. BPA is prevalent in plastic bottles and most baby bottles and the linings of canned food and beverages, but more than 100 scientific studies have shown that low doses of BPA in animals can lead to increases in cancer, brain damage, altered immune function and other health problems.
Rep. Markey said,
"From baby bottles to cans ofchicken
soup, BPA is present throughout American life. But concerns about the effects
of BPA on human health have been mounting, and we've reached a point where the
risk issimplytoo
high. For the sake of thehealth
of every man, woman and child in America, the best course of
action we can take right now is to completely
ban BPA in food and beverage containers, especially because there are
alternatives already available."
BPA is used to
harden plastics and is associated with a broad spectrum of hazardous effects.
Often used to make plastic bottles and as a coating in the linings of food and
beverage cans, it has been shown to leach out of the containers into liquids
and foods, and the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention found
measurable amounts of BPA in the bodies of 93 percent of the U.S. population
studied.
"Representative Markey's legislation is an essential step
to improving the health of all U.S.
citizens," said Jeanne Rizzo, R.N.,
executive director of the Breast Cancer Fund. "The presence of bisphenol-A
in commonly used goods is shockingly prevalent, and the average consumer is
unaware of what products to avoid. Americans expect and believe that their
government is safeguarding their health, and this legislation is an important
step in that direction."
Rep. Markey's BPA Act will ban BPA in all food and beverage
packaging. The bill has been endorsed by the following groups:
Breast Cancer Fund
Consumers Union
Environmental Working Group
Health, Education and Resources, Inc.
Making Our Milk Safe
National
Research Center
for Women and Families
Public Interest Research Group
Association of Reproductive Health Professionals
Chicago
Consortium for Reproductive Health in Minority Communities