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11d
ZME Science on MSNGlass bottles shed up to 50 times more microplastics into drinks than plastic or cans — and the paint on the cap may be to blameFor years, glass bottles have been regarded as the purer, safer alternative to plastic. In bars, restaurants, and kitchens ...
Drinks in glass bottles contained more microplastics than those in plastic bottles or cans, according to a new French study. Researchers traced ...
Drinks sold in glass bottles, like soda, wine, or beer, may contain more microplastic particles than those in plastic ones, a surprising new study published by France's food safety agency suggests.
Glass Bottles May Leak Up to 50 Times More Microplastics, Scientists Say. France’s food safety agency found that glass-bottled drinks, such as iced tea, lemonade, and beer, exhibited some of the ...
Water bottles, whether flat or sparkling, showed much lower levels of plastic particles regardless of whether they were made of glass or plastic. Glass water bottles contained about 4.5 particles per ...
Lets get real. There should be 0 microplastics in glass and metal bottles, as it should all be filtered out, and inside caps kept free of paint and cleaned with only a seal.
Doctors should note that microplastics measuring 30-500 μm have been detected in bottled water, soft drinks, tea, beer, and ...
19d
GlobalData on MSNGlass bottles contain more microplastics than other containers, study findsFor most drinks, including lemonade, iced tea, and beer, glass bottles contained around 100 microplastic ... The study suggests that microplastics in drinks from glass bottles with caps likely ...
Wine also contained few microplastics — even glass bottles with caps. Duflos said the reason for this discrepancy “remains to be explained”. Soft drinks however contained around 30 microplastics per ...
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