This very interesting article below is written by Taylor Orci
appeared in The Alantic 8 April 2013. (http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/04/are-tea-bags-turning-us-into-plastic/274482/)
Here's what happened: I was making tea one day,
waiting for my water to get hot, and I started reading the box. It touted the
fact that the company didn't use "silky" plastic tea bags, which
prompted my the question, "Wait... silky tea bags are plastic tea
bags?"
I'd used "silky" or "mesh"
tea bags before, and as someone who is turned off by the idea of eating heated
plastic, I never made the connection that "silky" didn't actually
mean silk, and "mesh" isn't really a specific thing at all. More put
off by the fact I'd been had than anything else, I wanted to find out if my alarm
about using plastic tea bags had any real basis to it.
At first blush, "silky tea bags" sound
like drinkable luxury. Often pyramidal in shape, this type of tea bag is
supposed to have higher quality -- sometimes even whole leaf -- tea inside, a
departure from the "dust" in most tea bags. If the quality isn't
higher, the tea is definitely more colorful. The see-through mesh allows you to
view what looks like edible potpourri.
Tea companies are very forthcoming in the pains
they've gone through to adopt such an innovative design. Boasts one website,
"In 2000, Revolution started a full-scale uprising, overthrowing the paper
tea bag in favor of the first flow-through Infuser bag." Another site, Tea Forte, explains adopting the silky tea bag because
"[They] wanted to create a total sensory and emotional experience that was
relevant to life today." What many of these sites don't mention is that
these silky tea bags, (or "sachets," or "infusers," or
"sculptural works of art," etc.) are plastic. Or, in the case of a
few companies such as Mighty Leaf,
corn plastic.
The idea of a plastic tea bag might be
unpalatable for folks for a number of reasons, the most clear-cut being the
contribution to landfill waste, but additionally because heating plastic can
rouse alarm in consumers. That's probably why tea companies like to describe
their silken sachets as a
quality compromise for loose leaf lovers who "are switching to [mesh tea
bags] as their lives get more hectic," instead of emphasizing "get
the plastic hot and then drink the thing it was in." For these reasons,
some tea companies like Numi even use their lack of plastic tea bags as a
selling point.
Could plastic tea bags also be bad for our
health? They are most commonly made from food grade nylon or polyethylene terephthalate
(PET), which are two of the safest plastics on the scale of harmful leaching
potential. Both have very high melting points, which offer some assurance to
consumers, as one would think the melting point of plastic is the temperature
at which one would need to worry about accidentally eating it.
There is another temperature point for plastics,
though, that we may need to worry about, called the "glass
transition" temperature (Tg) .
That is the temperature at which the molecule in certain materials such as
polymers begin to break down. As a rule, the Tg of a
material is always lower than the melting point. In the case of PET and
food grade nylon (either nylon 6 or nylon 6-6), all have a Tg lower
than the temperature of boiling water. For example, while the melting point of
PET is 482 degrees Fahrenheit, the Tg is
about 169 degrees. Both nylons have a lower glass transition temperature than
PET. (Remember that water boils at 212 degrees.) This means the molecules that
make up these plastic tea bags begin to break down in hot water.
"If the question is, 'As the polymer goes
through that transition state, is it easier for something to leach out?', the
answer is yes," said Dr. Ray Fernando, professor and director of polymers
and coatings at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. "However, just because it makes
it easier for something to leach out, it doesn't mean it will." There
seems to be something in the plastic collective consciousness that says there
are inherently toxins in all plastics, and when they begin to break down, they
will naturally gravitate toward food. "This would only happen if there are
potential materials trapped in the substance. What we don't know is what FDA
requirements manufacturers have to meet before they go to market," sais
Dr. Fernando.
There is also a matter of whether or not the
leachate is hydrophobic or hydrophilic. If hydrophobic pollutants were
potentially in the plastic tea bag materials, their nature would be to stay in
the bag and not go frolicking into the water and into your mouth.
So polymers will only leach out harmful
chemicals, like cancer causing phthalates, at their glass transition
temperature if there are said phthalates to begin with. It almost seems silly
to think that either of these materials would have toxins to begin with,
considering we eat off of them and in them. That's what food standards are for,
right? The Lipton website reassures
us their Pyramid Tea Bags made of PET are "the same food grade material
clear water and juice bottles are made of and ... are microwave safe."
That sounds, well ... safe.
But then there are studies like this: In 2009, a study found that single-use PET plastic water bottles were found to have
estrogen-mimicking pollutants in them. Such toxins have been linked to cancer.
If PET is found in these water bottles, the same material Lipton claims to use
in their plastic tea bags, it's fair to say there is a chance these tea bags
are leaching toxins into the tea they're brewing. Further, this study did not
look at the glass transition temperature and how that could increase the
leaching of said toxins. And while this study is only about PET plastic, it is
logical to question if nylon has the same potential.
"The consumer doesn't have a way to know how
to choose a safe plastic," said Stephen Lester, science director for the
Center for Health, Environment & Justice. He made mention of a study
decades ago where researchers found putting hot liquids in styrofoam cups could
be harmful. If I was at a party that was serving hot cocoa in styrofoam cups, I
probably wouldn't decline it -- the same with plastic tea bags. It's not like I'm
unaware they may pose a health risk, but I unconsciously file them under the
heading of, "probably not so bad." But this may be at my own peril.
There's just no comprehensive way of knowing.
In our discussion, Dr. Fernando departed from
talking about the sexy topic of polymer toxicity potential for a moment and
mentioned that paper manufacturing is also highly polluting, "[Regarding
the paper tea bag] paper is a very chemically intensive process. But the thing
is we've been using the [paper] bag for a long time, so we know it's
okay." One would love to soothe the nerves agitated by this topic with a
scintillating cup of
White Tea with Island Mango and Peach, if only one knew for sure it was okay.
My polymers expert made mention-- and I agree,
that to test the level of phthalates in tea made from plastic tea bags would be
an easy one to conduct. So I contacted the Center for Health, Environment, and
Justice to see if they had any such study in their databases. As helpful as
they were digging up many peer reviews about plastic, tea, and toxicity, a
study about the toxicity of plastic tea bags couldn't be found. I also contacted
the Center for Disease Control -- the disease here being cancer which has been
linked to phthalates, and asked the same thing, but as of this writing I've yet
to hear back.
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