
Is it OK to drink bottled water after the expiration date in Japan?
The answer may not surprise you but the reason will.
Let's say you're at home, going through your disaster preparedness kit, and you find a bottle of spring water you bought a long time ago in case of emergency. Checking by the cap, you see that the expiry date was a few months ago, and decide to use it to water plants or top off the washing machine instead of drinking it. Well, congratulations; you just wasted perfectly good water.
Alright, 'perfectly good' might be an overstatement since we're still not sure what the microplastics floating around in there can do to us, and 'waste' is also a little harsh since plants are our friends too. But the point stands that you could have drank that water and it would have been more or less as good as the day you bought it.
▼ Consider drinking that bottle of water rather than keeping it outside to ward off stray cats as some people in Japan do.
Image: Pakutaso
This is because according to the Secretary General of the Japan Mineral Water Association, the 'expiration date' on bottled water isn't used for the same reason that it's used on perishable food. This is actually the date at which water inside the bottle is expected to have evaporated so much that the bottler cannot guarantee the amount written on the bottle is inside anymore and could be held liable for false labeling.
Water bottles in Japan are usually made of a type of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is slightly permeable to water vapor. Some tests have found that when stored at around 25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit) around two to three milliliters (0.07 – 0.1 ounces) of water vapor can escape per month. Also, in the hot summer months of around 37 degrees Celsius (99 degrees Fahrenheit), that rate goes up to about 4 milliliters per month.
Meanwhile, the Measurement Act of Japan states that the actual contents of a bottle must be no less than two percent under the amount listed on the label for bottles under 500 milliliters (17 ounces) and no less than 10 milliliters less than the labeled amount for bottles 500 milliliters and up. So, bottlers of water simply calculate the rate of evaporation and release through the PET bottle, apply it to the legal threshold, and an expiry date is born, but it's not the water that expires. It's the label on the bottle that does.
▼ Phew… Honey, can you smell this label? I think it's gone bad.
Of course, this is a separate subject from contamination from chemicals inside the plastic of the bottle, and it's possible both things could be occurring at the same time. But since evaporation happens rather quickly, would there even be enough time for significant amounts of potentially hazardous chemicals to seep into the water from the plastic?
Going by the rate of evaporation found in studies, at two milliliters per month we can expect a 500-milliliter bottle to be empty in 20 years and 10 months. In the case of chemicals from the plastic entering the water, known as 'leaching,' the most worrisome elements are antimony and germanium. Under normal storage conditions, it would take about 71 years for enough antimony to enter the water to surpass Japanese safety standards and about 15 years for the germanium levels to surpass those deemed safe.
Mind you these are just the standards, which tend to err on the side of caution, meaning one 15-year-old 500-milliliter bottle of water — wait… 140-milliliter at that point — probably won't send you straight to the ER. Even factoring in things like the lower concentration of water as it evaporates and the diminished leaching as the surface area shrinks, you're still looking at about a good nine years or so before standards are exceeded.
One big caveat to all this is that it only applies to Japanese water that has been sterilized to Japanese standards and in bottles made to Japanese standards. Every country has its own standards, including what it considers the allowable limits of antimony and germanium to be, so do your own research before consuming 10-year-old bottles of water anywhere outside of Japan.
Microplastics are also still a bit of a wildcard, in terms of their effect on the human body and how rapidly they break down in a typical Japanese PET bottle of water. Most microplastics are said to enter the water during bottling at the factory, so the bulk of it will already be present in a brand-new bottle anyway, with only a relatively moderate increase over time if stored securely. Unfortunately, there don't seem to be any studies on microplastic contamination over very long spans of time, such as 10 years.
▼ In other words, if you're worried about microplastics you really shouldn't even be drinking new plastic bottles of water.
This information has recently been trending online in Japan and many came out in agreement with it, either using their own theoretical knowledge or personal experiences. Others still felt it wasn't worth the gamble.
'If the water can escape, can't things like bacteria get in?'
'Molecules like water and carbon dioxide are 0.3 nanometers, about the same as gaps in permeable plastic, but a virus is about 20 nanometers so it can't get in.'
'If I leave water out, I just use it for laundry.'
'I'm still just going to use it for cleaning and watering plants.'
'Water is always fine, isn't it?'
'I had some water that I'd been keeping for seven years in case of emergency. I drank it when I replaced it and it was fine.'
'I've been given expired ones before and there definitely seemed like less water inside.'
'If the bottles are breathable I probably shouldn't store them next to the toilet.'
'If the bottle is shriveled that's good because the air pressure outside is collapsing it. If the bottle is old and a normal shape, air has gotten inside and there might be bacteria too.'
'I'm still going to pour it down the drain anyway. Why take a chance?'
Whether you're willing to crack open a seven-year-old bottle of Japanese water is entirely up to you, but the key takeaway from all this is that the expiration date written on it has absolutely nothing to do with its quality, so feel free to hang onto it at least a little bit longer than that.
Source: Yahoo! Japan News, The Sankei Shimbun, withnews, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry, Japan Soft Drink Association, Japanese Journal of Food Chemistry and Safety, Food Safety Commission, Hachima Kiko
Images: ©SoraNews24 (unless otherwise noted)
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Japan Today
2 days ago
- Japan Today
Is it OK to drink bottled water after the expiration date in Japan?
By SoraNews24 Let's say you're at home, going through your disaster preparedness kit, and you find a bottle of spring water you bought a long time ago in case of emergency. Checking by the cap, you see that the expiry date was a few months ago, and decide to use it to water plants or top off the washing machine instead of drinking it. Well, congratulations; you just wasted perfectly good water. Alright, 'perfectly good' might be an overstatement since we're still not sure what the microplastics floating around in there can do to us, and 'waste' is also a little harsh since plants are our friends too. But the point stands that you could have drunk that water and it would have been more or less as good as the day you bought it. This is because according to the Secretary General of the Japan Mineral Water Association, the 'expiration date' on bottled water isn't used for the same reason that it's used on perishable food. This is actually the date at which water inside the bottle is expected to have evaporated so much that the bottler cannot guarantee the amount written on the bottle is inside anymore and could be held liable for false labeling. Water bottles in Japan are usually made of a type of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is slightly permeable to water vapor. Some tests have found that when stored at around 25 degrees Celsius around two to three milliliters of water vapor can escape per month. Also, in the hot summer months of around 37 degrees Celsius, that rate goes up to about 4 milliliters per month. Meanwhile, the Measurement Act of Japan states that the actual contents of a bottle must be no less than two percent under the amount listed on the label for bottles under 500 milliliters and no less than 10 milliliters less than the labeled amount for bottles 500 milliliters and up. So, bottlers of water simply calculate the rate of evaporation and release through the PET bottle, apply it to the legal threshold, and an expiry date is born, but it's not the water that expires. It's the label on the bottle that does. Of course, this is a separate subject from contamination from chemicals inside the plastic of the bottle, and it's possible both things could be occurring at the same time. But since evaporation happens rather quickly, would there even be enough time for significant amounts of potentially hazardous chemicals to seep into the water from the plastic? Going by the rate of evaporation found in studies, at two milliliters per month we can expect a 500-milliliter bottle to be empty in 20 years and 10 months. In the case of chemicals from the plastic entering the water, known as 'leaching,' the most worrisome elements are antimony and germanium. Under normal storage conditions, it would take about 71 years for enough antimony to enter the water to surpass Japanese safety standards and about 15 years for the germanium levels to surpass those deemed safe. Mind you these are just the standards, which tend to err on the side of caution, meaning one 15-year-old 500-milliliter bottle of water — wait… 140-milliliter at that point — probably won't send you straight to the ER. Even factoring in things like the lower concentration of water as it evaporates and the diminished leaching as the surface area shrinks, you're still looking at about a good nine years or so before standards are exceeded. One big caveat to all this is that it only applies to Japanese water that has been sterilized to Japanese standards and in bottles made to Japanese standards. Every country has its own standards, including what it considers the allowable limits of antimony and germanium to be, so do your own research before consuming 10-year-old bottles of water anywhere outside of Japan. Microplastics are also still a bit of a wildcard, in terms of their effect on the human body and how rapidly they break down in a typical Japanese PET bottle of water. Most microplastics are said to enter the water during bottling at the factory, so the bulk of it will already be present in a brand-new bottle anyway, with only a relatively moderate increase over time if stored securely. Unfortunately, there don't seem to be any studies on microplastic contamination over very long spans of time, such as 10 years. ▼ In other words, if you're worried about microplastics you really shouldn't even be drinking new plastic bottles of water. Image: SoraNews24 This information has recently been trending online in Japan and many came out in agreement with it, either using their own theoretical knowledge or personal experiences. Others still felt it wasn't worth the gamble. 'If the water can escape, can't things like bacteria get in?' 'Molecules like water and carbon dioxide are 0.3 nanometers, about the same as gaps in permeable plastic, but a virus is about 20 nanometers so it can't get in.' 'If I leave water out, I just use it for laundry.' 'I'm still just going to use it for cleaning and watering plants.' 'Water is always fine, isn't it?' 'I had some water that I'd been keeping for seven years in case of emergency. I drank it when I replaced it and it was fine.' 'I've been given expired ones before and there definitely seemed like less water inside.' 'If the bottles are breathable I probably shouldn't store them next to the toilet.' 'If the bottle is shriveled that's good because the air pressure outside is collapsing it. If the bottle is old and a normal shape, air has gotten inside and there might be bacteria too.' 'I'm still going to pour it down the drain anyway. Why take a chance?' Whether you're willing to crack open a seven-year-old bottle of Japanese water is entirely up to you, but the key takeaway from all this is that the expiration date written on it has absolutely nothing to do with its quality, so feel free to hang onto it at least a little bit longer than that. Sources: Yahoo! Japan News, The Sankei Shimbun, withnews, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry, Japan Soft Drink Association, Japanese Journal of Food Chemistry and Safety, Food Safety Commission, Hachima Kiko Read more stories from SoraNews24. -- Japanese Twitter calls out crazy bottled water claims, gets us thinking about what we're drinking -- Leading bottled water brand in Japan goes label-free to reduce waste, angers many -- Internet reacts with confusion to Muji's new fill-it-up-yourself water bottle product External Link © SoraNews24


SoraNews24
3 days ago
- SoraNews24
Is it OK to drink bottled water after the expiration date in Japan?
The answer may not surprise you but the reason will. Let's say you're at home, going through your disaster preparedness kit, and you find a bottle of spring water you bought a long time ago in case of emergency. Checking by the cap, you see that the expiry date was a few months ago, and decide to use it to water plants or top off the washing machine instead of drinking it. Well, congratulations; you just wasted perfectly good water. Alright, 'perfectly good' might be an overstatement since we're still not sure what the microplastics floating around in there can do to us, and 'waste' is also a little harsh since plants are our friends too. But the point stands that you could have drank that water and it would have been more or less as good as the day you bought it. ▼ Consider drinking that bottle of water rather than keeping it outside to ward off stray cats as some people in Japan do. Image: Pakutaso This is because according to the Secretary General of the Japan Mineral Water Association, the 'expiration date' on bottled water isn't used for the same reason that it's used on perishable food. This is actually the date at which water inside the bottle is expected to have evaporated so much that the bottler cannot guarantee the amount written on the bottle is inside anymore and could be held liable for false labeling. Water bottles in Japan are usually made of a type of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is slightly permeable to water vapor. Some tests have found that when stored at around 25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit) around two to three milliliters (0.07 – 0.1 ounces) of water vapor can escape per month. Also, in the hot summer months of around 37 degrees Celsius (99 degrees Fahrenheit), that rate goes up to about 4 milliliters per month. Meanwhile, the Measurement Act of Japan states that the actual contents of a bottle must be no less than two percent under the amount listed on the label for bottles under 500 milliliters (17 ounces) and no less than 10 milliliters less than the labeled amount for bottles 500 milliliters and up. So, bottlers of water simply calculate the rate of evaporation and release through the PET bottle, apply it to the legal threshold, and an expiry date is born, but it's not the water that expires. It's the label on the bottle that does. ▼ Phew… Honey, can you smell this label? I think it's gone bad. Of course, this is a separate subject from contamination from chemicals inside the plastic of the bottle, and it's possible both things could be occurring at the same time. But since evaporation happens rather quickly, would there even be enough time for significant amounts of potentially hazardous chemicals to seep into the water from the plastic? Going by the rate of evaporation found in studies, at two milliliters per month we can expect a 500-milliliter bottle to be empty in 20 years and 10 months. In the case of chemicals from the plastic entering the water, known as 'leaching,' the most worrisome elements are antimony and germanium. Under normal storage conditions, it would take about 71 years for enough antimony to enter the water to surpass Japanese safety standards and about 15 years for the germanium levels to surpass those deemed safe. Mind you these are just the standards, which tend to err on the side of caution, meaning one 15-year-old 500-milliliter bottle of water — wait… 140-milliliter at that point — probably won't send you straight to the ER. Even factoring in things like the lower concentration of water as it evaporates and the diminished leaching as the surface area shrinks, you're still looking at about a good nine years or so before standards are exceeded. One big caveat to all this is that it only applies to Japanese water that has been sterilized to Japanese standards and in bottles made to Japanese standards. Every country has its own standards, including what it considers the allowable limits of antimony and germanium to be, so do your own research before consuming 10-year-old bottles of water anywhere outside of Japan. Microplastics are also still a bit of a wildcard, in terms of their effect on the human body and how rapidly they break down in a typical Japanese PET bottle of water. Most microplastics are said to enter the water during bottling at the factory, so the bulk of it will already be present in a brand-new bottle anyway, with only a relatively moderate increase over time if stored securely. Unfortunately, there don't seem to be any studies on microplastic contamination over very long spans of time, such as 10 years. ▼ In other words, if you're worried about microplastics you really shouldn't even be drinking new plastic bottles of water. This information has recently been trending online in Japan and many came out in agreement with it, either using their own theoretical knowledge or personal experiences. Others still felt it wasn't worth the gamble. 'If the water can escape, can't things like bacteria get in?' 'Molecules like water and carbon dioxide are 0.3 nanometers, about the same as gaps in permeable plastic, but a virus is about 20 nanometers so it can't get in.' 'If I leave water out, I just use it for laundry.' 'I'm still just going to use it for cleaning and watering plants.' 'Water is always fine, isn't it?' 'I had some water that I'd been keeping for seven years in case of emergency. I drank it when I replaced it and it was fine.' 'I've been given expired ones before and there definitely seemed like less water inside.' 'If the bottles are breathable I probably shouldn't store them next to the toilet.' 'If the bottle is shriveled that's good because the air pressure outside is collapsing it. If the bottle is old and a normal shape, air has gotten inside and there might be bacteria too.' 'I'm still going to pour it down the drain anyway. Why take a chance?' Whether you're willing to crack open a seven-year-old bottle of Japanese water is entirely up to you, but the key takeaway from all this is that the expiration date written on it has absolutely nothing to do with its quality, so feel free to hang onto it at least a little bit longer than that. Source: Yahoo! Japan News, The Sankei Shimbun, withnews, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry, Japan Soft Drink Association, Japanese Journal of Food Chemistry and Safety, Food Safety Commission, Hachima Kiko Images: ©SoraNews24 (unless otherwise noted) ● Want to hear about SoraNews24's latest articles as soon as they're published? Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!


The Mainichi
28-05-2025
- The Mainichi
Japan's scorching summer heat forcing fireworks, other festivals to change schedules
TOKYO -- The extreme summer heat that has struck Japan in recent years due climate change is altering the landscape of annual fireworks and other festivals in the country, forcing the summer events to be moved to spring or autumn. Even so, there are cases where it has been difficult to reschedule the festivals due to their traditional nature. Farewell to fireworks viewing in 'yukata' summer kimonos? The Adachi Fireworks Festival, an annual summer tradition in Tokyo's Adachi Ward with a history of roughly 100 years, is set to be held May 31 this year instead of late July as had been the norm. Last summer, the festival had to be canceled shortly before its start due to an abrupt thunderstorm. By moving the festival forward this year, organizers hope to avoid the risk of cancellation due to bad weather, but "the extreme heat is more serious than just that," points out Adachi Ward Mayor Yayoi Kondo on the ward's official website. Last year, the temperature on the day of the fireworks festival had already climbed to 30 degrees Celsius by 7 a.m., and shortly after 10 a.m. it had surged above 35 C. A security guard was taken to a hospital due to heatstroke and many visitors also complained of feeling ill. As the main venue is located on the riverbed, there were few spots for sheltering from the scorching sun during preparations, taking an unusually serious toll on pyrotechnicians and city employees who were there from early in the day. While Mayor Kondo acknowledged, "Some people want to see the fireworks festival held in summer, calling it a summer tradition," she sought understanding for moving up the event schedule, saying, "The summer lately has significantly changed from what we knew as 'Japanese summer,' where people clad in 'yukata' summer kimonos admired fireworks while cooling themselves with 'uchiwa' paper fans." A representative of the Adachi Tourism Exchange Association said of the schedule change, "We're receiving positive feedback this year, such as 'I can bring my young child'" to the festival. 'Passing down tradition ...' Japan's local regions are also changing the schedules of their traditional events. Toride Jinja shrine's Kujirabune event in Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture -- an event appearing on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list as one of the "Yama, Hoko, Yatai, float festivals in Japan" -- will be pushed back from Aug. 14 and 15 to Sept. 27 and 28 this year. In the festival, which dates back to the Edo period (1603-1867), people drag around floats shaped like ships to imitate whaling. Of the nearly 100 participants including staff, almost half are aged 60 or older due to the aging of the community, while elementary school students take on the role of harpooners aboard the floats. While organizers have taken every step possible to beat the heat, such as borrowing mist sprayers from the municipal government, they decided to change the date this year as "it would be too late if any emergency occurred." As the schedule change means the festival will no longer coincide with the Bon holiday season in August, the event this year will be held as part of dedication rites of the annual Gani festival that has traditionally been held at the shrine on Sept. 23. Masahiko Kato, 70, chairperson of the Tomida Kujirabune preservation society association, coordinated with locals and the Agency for Cultural Affairs regarding the date change, and strove to publicize it and secure enough personnel, calling it "a change to pass down the tradition." Event schedules changing across Japan In the Tohoku region in Japan's northeast, organizers of the Soma Nomaoi festival in the Soma region of Fukushima Prefecture, featuring costumed warriors on horseback, have since last year moved up the event from July to May to prioritize the safety of horses and people taking part, after a horse died of sunstroke during the festival in July 2023. Summer festivals in southwest Japan's Kyushu region have also seen a spate of scheduling changes this year. The Wasshoi Hyakuman Natsu Matsuri festival in Kitakyushu is being pushed back from August to September, while the Saga Castle Town Sakae no Kuni festival in the city of Saga, originally held in August, is now due to take place from May 31 to June 1. Difficult to change some festivals However, traditional seasonal celebrations like the "Tanabata" star festival, which normally takes place around July 7, are difficult to reschedule, as their significance would be lost. The Shonan Hiratsuka Tanabata Festival, featuring nearly 10-meter-tall decorations adorning the shopping streets in Hiratsuka, Kanagawa Prefecture, used to attract some 1.5 million visitors until 2019, but the number declined to roughly 1.1 million both in 2023 and 2024, with observers attributing it to the scorching summer heat. It is said that some children from day care centers and kindergartens forgo participating in the daytime parades while elderly people also refrain from watching the parades. "As it is a seasonal festival, we are not considering changing the schedule," said an official at the Hiratsuka Municipal Government's commerce and tourism division, adding that the city will install misting fans as a countermeasure against the summer heat. (Japanese original by Shuji Ozaki, Digital News Group)