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June 20, 2025

Glass bottles found to contain more microplastics than plastic bottles

Drinks in glass bottles had five to 50 times more microplastic fragments than in plastic bottles.
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Drinks in glass bottles had five to 50 times more microplastic fragments than in plastic bottles.

Drinks including water, soda, beer and wine sold in glass bottles contain more microplastics than those in plastic bottles, according to a surprising study released by France's food safety agency Friday.

Researchers have detected the tiny, mostly invisible pieces of plastic throughout the world, from in the air we breathe to the food we eat, as well as riddled throughout .

There is still no direct evidence that this preponderance of plastic is harmful to , but a burgeoning field of research is aiming to measure its spread.

Guillaume Duflos, research director at French food safety agency ANSES, told AFP the team sought to "investigate the quantity of microplastics in different types of drinks sold in France and examine the impact different containers can have."

The researchers found an average of around 100 per liter in glass bottles of , lemonade, iced tea and beer. That was five to 50 times higher than the rate detected in or metal cans.

"We expected the opposite result," Ph.D. student Iseline Chaib, who conducted the research, told AFP.

"We then noticed that in the glass, the particles emerging from the samples were the same shape, color and polymer composition—so therefore the same plastic—as the paint on the outside of the caps that seal the glass bottles," she said.

The paint on the caps also had "tiny scratches, invisible to the , probably due to friction between the caps when there were stored," the agency said in a statement.

This could then "release particles onto the surface of the caps," it added.

For water, both flat and sparkling, the amount of microplastic was relatively low in all cases.
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For water, both flat and sparkling, the amount of microplastic was relatively low in all cases.

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Wine fine

For water, both flat and sparkling, the amount of was relatively low in all cases, ranging from 4.5 particles per liter in glass bottles to 1.6 particles in plastic.

Wine also contained few microplastics—even bottles with caps. Duflos said the reason for this discrepancy "remains to be explained."

Soft drinks however contained around 30 microplastics per liter, lemonade 40 and beer around 60.

Because there is no reference level for a potentially toxic amount of microplastics, it was not possible to say whether these figures represent a health risk, ANSES said.

But drink manufacturers could easily reduce the amount of microplastics shed by bottle caps, it added.

The agency tested a cleaning method involving blowing the caps with air, then rinsing them with water and alcohol, which reduced contamination by 60%.

The study released by ANSES online in the Journal of Food Composition and Analysis last month.

More information: Iseline Chaïb et al, Microplastic contaminations in a set of beverages sold in France, Journal of Food Composition and Analysis (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.jfca.2025.107719

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Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

Glass bottles of beverages such as soft drinks, lemonade, and beer contain significantly more microplastic particles—averaging around 100 particles per liter—than plastic bottles or metal cans. The primary source is microplastics shed from the paint on glass bottle caps. Water and wine in glass bottles have relatively low microplastic levels. No direct health risk has been established.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.