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For Immediate Release:
2008-04-15
For More Information:
J.R. Tolbert (434) 202-8373

Statement Of Christy Leavitt, Environment America Clean Water Advocate, On Pharmaceuticals In America’s Drinking Water

As the Senate subcommittee on Transportation Safety, Infrastructure Security and Water Quality is hearing in testimony today, pharmaceuticals are emerging as a serious concern for our nation’s drinking water supplies.  Congress should require the multibillion dollar pharmaceutical industry to prevent its products from further contaminating our drinking water, or to pay for the cost of removing them.

It’s simple: every American should be able to go to their kitchen sink and pour a glass of water that is drug-free.

Recent reports by the Associated Press confirmed long-held concerns that a wide range of pharmaceuticals - including antibiotics, anti-depressants, and sex hormones - are winding up in numerous major drinking water supplies across the country.  There are several reasons to be deeply concerned by this contamination:

  •  Most pharmaceuticals are specifically designed to be biologically active at very low concentrations;
  • While physicians carefully prescribe medications– limiting dose, drug interactions, and screening patients with risk of adverse reaction – none of these safeguards apply when adults and children unwittingly drink water containing pharmaceuticals.
  • Widespread exposure to antibiotics increases the risk that pathogens will develop further resistance to one or more of them; and
  • Several common pharmaceuticals – from birth control pills to steroids – affect hormone levels.  The U.S. Geological Survey has found an alarming level of reproductive deformities in fish near heavy farming and population centers in the Potomac watershed.

With thousands of chemicals and other variables to consider, it might be decades before we can determine the full extent of these and other risks posed by drugs in drinking water.  But if we have learned anything from other environmental threats – PCBs, mercury, global warming – it is that waiting for a full account of risks invites irreparable harm and increases the cost of cleanup.  Moreover, waiting for proof that pharmaceuticals are causing harm in our drinking water is contrary to decades of drug safety policy in this country, where drugs are supposed to be proven “safe” before coming to market.

Now is the time to start getting drugs out of our water.  Environment America recommends the following measures to address this problem:

First, the pharmaceutical industry should prevent the unnecessary flow of its products into our nation’s rivers, bays, lakes and streams.  Where feasible, drug companies should re-engineer their products for more efficient human and animal intake, so that less excess active ingredients are flushed into water systems.

Second, in cases where the makers of pharmaceuticals and personal care products cannot prevent pollution on the front end, then they should be required to pay for removing their chemicals from our water systems on the back end.  Our nation’s water and sewage treatment facilities are already financially strained and falling behind on upgrades and repairs. Adding advanced treatment for removing pharmaceuticals will only be possible if this multibillion dollar industry pays its fair share of the cost.

Third, we need to reduce the unnecessary use of antibiotics and hormonal treatments – especially in livestock operations.

Finally, this emerging pharmaceutical threat should remind Congress and the Bush administration of the myriad other threats to our waters – and the need to dramatically increase the funding for Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds (SRF).  EPA has projected that communities across the country will need to spend nearly $400 billion over the next 20 years to improve sewage treatment systems in order to preserve water quality.  To help ensure clean water, Congress should significantly increase funding for the Clean Water and Drinking Water SRFs and prioritize funding for Clean Water SRF projects that utilize green infrastructure to reduce polluted runoff.

The pharmaceutical companies need to step up and help keep prescription drugs and other medicine out of our water.

Clean, safe water should be a right, not a privilege, for all Americans. But even as the Clean Water Act celebrates its 35th  year, pharmaceutical pollution is the latest reminder that achieving that goal will require a renewed national commitment – from government, industry, and citizens.