home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0543>
- <title>
- Feb. 26, 1990: Let Them Drink Seltzer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 26, 1990 Predator's Fall
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FOOD, Page 43
- Let Them Drink Seltzer
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The champagne of bottled water loses its sparkle
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--With reporting by Bruce Crumley/Paris and
- Janice M. Horowitz/New York
- </p>
- <p> For those who believed in the verities of the '80s--that
- greed is good, that one can never be too rich or too thin, and
- that abstinence and exercise will lead to eternal life--the
- new decade spells trying times. Mike Tyson's crown has toppled,
- and the Trumps have split. Oat bran is no panacea; Drexel is
- bankrupt. "I suspect," says editor E. Graydon Carter, 40,
- co-founder of Spy magazine, "that when they find red suspenders
- cause back problems, that will be the final nail in the yuppie
- coffin."
- </p>
- <p> For the faithful who spent their days selling bonds and
- their nights at the juice bar, the holy water was Perrier, a
- drink with the flavor of old rocks and the price of cheap
- perfume. Shielded from the light in its distinctive green
- bowling-pin bottles, Perrier was the drink of choice of a whole
- generation that was equally suspicious of whisky and Pepsi. But
- those who are busy toasting the beginning of a new decade may
- have to return to Scotch or soda--at least for a while.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Perrier announced that it was recalling its
- product worldwide, having already reclaimed 72 million bottles
- from stores and restaurants in North America. Reason: traces of
- benzene, a known carcinogen, had been found in the water, first
- in the U.S., then at the very plant where the water is bottled
- in Vergeze, France. Yuppies shuddered, bartenders flinched, lime
- futures tumbled and normally well-hydrated joggers faced
- desiccation rather than switch to Schweppes. To the true
- believers, those who used it to spray their camellias or rinse
- their lingerie or boil fusilli or water their Scotch, there
- could be no substitute for Perrier.
- </p>
- <p> For Paris-based Source Perrier, which did $119 million in
- U.S. sales in 1988, protecting the sanctity of its product is
- crucial. How, after all, does a company persuade a population
- that the presence of a few bubbles transforms the most common
- substance on earth into a fashion statement? With its reverent
- ads and fitness-cult following, Perrier won a unique niche in
- the psyche and vocabulary of the '80s. "People ask for Perrier
- when they want mineral water," says Dan Rose, a bartender at an
- uptown Manhattan restaurant, "the same way they ask for Kleenex
- when they want a tissue. Perrier has come to mean mineral
- water." Riding the decade's fitness fad, sales jumped 190% in
- seven years.
- </p>
- <p> Then one day last month, county water testers in North
- Carolina, who use Perrier's purity in their labs to gauge local
- water quality, found that the French product was contaminated
- with excessive levels of benzene, a solvent used, among other
- things, to make Styrofoam. The Food and Drug Administration
- ordered random tests and found similar benzene levels in 13
- bottles. FDA officials noted that there was not much danger.
- Drinking two small bottles of contaminated Perrier a day, they
- estimated, would increase one's lifetime risk of cancer by only
- one in a million.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, Perrier rushed to assure customers that the
- source was still pure. "The decision to recall was made by the
- company itself," said FDA spokesman Chris Lecos. "We didn't
- request it." Pressed for an explanation by French reporters,
- Perrier officials at first speculated that the chemical came
- from an overly fastidious workman who used a solution containing
- benzene to clean grease from some bottling machinery. If indeed
- only one bottling line was affected, production could resume
- quickly, and the bottles would be back on store shelves within
- weeks.
- </p>
- <p> But the explanation did not ring quite true, partly because
- bottling plants, fearing just such contamination, do not usually
- use toxic chemicals to clean their equipment. Days later,
- Perrier officials abandoned the careless-worker hypothesis and
- disclosed that, in fact, all bottling lines had been
- contaminated. The new explanation: the real fault lay in
- saturated filters, which someone had failed to replace. It turns
- out that Perrier straight from the source contains traces of
- benzene, which occurs naturally in the gases that give Perrier
- its fizz, and that filters are routinely used to extract the
- chemical. "I think it is fairly clear that they rearranged the
- truth," says Anne Mougenot, an analyst with Didier Philippe
- brokerage in Paris. "At first they grabbed for anything, and now
- they have this theory of saturated filters."
- </p>
- <p> Since other mineral-water brands from nearby springs have
- also been found to be contaminated, some speculate that a
- drought in the region may have raised the level of natural
- contaminants in the water. This would tend to clog the filters
- more quickly. "Of course they cannot say this," notes Mougenot,
- "because it would be close to saying that the source is really
- polluted."
- </p>
- <p> The French do not seem to be losing much sleep over the
- slipup; in fact, the little green bottles were readily available
- in Paris cafes last week, and could be back in the U.S. by next
- month. This will surely relieve those who quailed at the
- prospect of entering the Decency Decade without it. But for
- others, it may not make much difference one way or the other.
- Much of the heartland never quite embraced the idea of paying
- more for a glass of water than for a bottle of beer, and in Los
- Angeles Perrier is already passe. "Evian is hotter than
- Perrier," says Roland Fasel, the food-and-beverage manager of
- the swank Bel-Air Hotel. "It even sells for breakfast." In New
- York City apostates are already appearing. "I'm going to order
- plain old Brooklyn seltzer," says entertainment lawyer Jonathan
- Horn. "If I'm going to drink benzene, by God, it's gonna be good
- old American benzene."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-