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Hot Water: How SIGG Lost My Trust (And Kind of Broke My Heart)

Posted: 09/02/09 05:35 PM ET

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I waited to write this post until after I had the opportunity to speak with SIGG CEO Steve Wasik. I am still disappointed.

Over this last week we have learned that SIGG bottles manufactured before August 2008 (not 2009, as I mistakenly mentioned earlier) contained Bisphenol-A (BPA) in their liners. BPA is a chemical used in the manufacture of polycarbonate plastics and epoxy resins and is part of a group of molecules known as endocrine disruptors.

Endocrine disruptors are defined by the National Institute of Health as

naturally occurring compounds or man-made chemicals that may interfere with the production or activity of hormones of the endocrine system leading to adverse health effects. Many of these chemicals have been linked with developmental, reproductive, neural, immune, and other problems in wildlife and laboratory animals. Some scientists think these chemicals also are adversely affecting human health in similar ways resulting in declined fertility and increased incidences or progression of some diseases including endometriosis and cancers.

BPA is everywhere: in plastic bottles, in metal food cans, in food and toys. But where we did not think it existed was in our SIGGs. I have gone on the Oprah Winfrey Show, the Martha Stewart Show, the Ellen DeGeneres Show and told scores of magazines, newspapers, radio programs and lecture audiences to get reusable water bottles. My follow-up line has often been, "I use SIGGs" - accompanied by a gesture towards the bottle that was nearly always on my person, one that I had known and loved for years.

I got my first SIGG because of my concerns about BPA and, well, because they were prettier than the stainless steel options. When others started to ask about them, I gave the same spiel. I reasoned that if it was good enough for me, of course it was good enough for your kids, my students and the world. In fact, the very first time I appeared on Oprah, I laid down the line and said I could not promote the bottles in their giveaway because they were #7 polycarbonates known to leach Bisphenol-A. The producers ended up replacing them with another kind of plastic bottle because they already had a deal set up with the company. But when it came to the bottles I talked about on-air, I spoke about SIGGs.

At no point over the last few years, in the handful of conversations and e-mail exchanges I have had with SIGG's PR company Truth Be Told, were my perceptions that the bottles were free from BPA corrected. For the record, I don't think I said they were BPA-free, but that's really not the point, is it? You trusted me to tell you the truth. And I did, to the extent that I knew it. And Truth Be Told did, too, to the extent that they knew it. My August 27, 2009 e-mail exchange with a member of the TBT team and follow-up phone conversation with another member demonstrate they did not. "As you can imagine, we were surprised and disappointed as well - we found out this information only a few days before you did," says the TBT staffer.

In my conversation with Steve Wasik, he said SIGG did not reveal the BPA information because of a non-disclosure agreement they had with their manufacturer. He said he thought it was enough that their studies - indicating there was no leaching - were sufficient. Yet, at the same time, SIGG began development on a new BPA-free liner back in 2006. When I asked Wasik about this contradiction, he pushed the responsibility back on to the supply chain, stating, "Our confidentiality agreement with our suppliers would not allow us to talk about the liner. . .We couldn't just come out and talk about what they were made of since we were bound by our old suppliers not to talk about the ingredients." Wasik punctuated his statement with a rhetorical question, "Could we have been more transparent? We made a mistake and probably should have said something but we did not have a new liner to go with." Finally, he went on to remind me that testing indicated the bottles were always "100% safe" and did not leach BPA.

Technically, he is right. But at no point did SIGG ever correct the public's misperception that the bottles were BPA-free. In fact, they profited from it. According to Advertising Age, SIGG sales increased 250% between 2006 and 2007. The January 2009 press release from SIGG indicated they were creating a new line of bottles with what they called an EcoCare liner. What they did not say, and what even their PR company did not know, was the underlying reason for this change: that the original SIGGs contained BPA.

If you log on to the SIGG website, you will find a new link to an apology from the CEO on its home page. The controversy has been brewing for a week, yet this apology was posted yesterday (9/1/09). The company tells you they will replace your old SIGGs with new ones if you are willing to fork over the money to send it back to them. I asked Wasik about pushing the responsibility back on to the consumer and he said, "We don't believe this is a recall but we know there are some consumers out there that are concerned. If we pay for this we'll get people who aren't concerned - which is about 9 out of 10 people - sending back bottles they bought three years ago that have dents in them." He want on to explain that most major retailers that stock SIGGs will replace them. I called REI and Whole Foods stores to verify this and it is, indeed, the case. However, this information is not revealed on the SIGG website. All it says (on the downloadable mailing label) is, "We are sorry for the inconvenience. You may choose to keep your current bottles as they have been proven not to leach, but if you want to exchange your bottle(s), you will have to bear the cost of returning it to us. Thank you in advance for your kind understanding in this regard." I guess you have to talk with the CEO to learn that there might be a more cost-effective way to swap them out. Oh, and hurry up, the offer ends on 10/31/09.

Although asked, I have never signed on to be a spokesperson for a product because I believe it compromises my integrity as a journalist and environmental advocate. (Full disclosure, I did get paid to moderate a Seventh Generation panel on industrial chemicals and health last fall.) Any product that has earned my praise has done so on its own merits. SIGG was one of the very few companies I chose to discuss by name. (I even participated in a Sigg100 celebration by recording a podcast about environmentally-friendly practices alongside Ed Begley Jr., Laurie David and others to coincide with the company's 100 year anniversary.) Today, I am telling you that I am deeply sorry for leading you astray. Had I known better, I would have used - and promoted - BPA-free alternatives from the onset. Steve Wasik tells me he still uses the old bottles with the BPA liner for himself and his family. I intend on following in the steps of fellow HuffPost blogger Nena Baker and reconsider a swig from my SIGG.


Simran Sethi is a freelance environmental journalist, Associate Professor of Journalism and contributing author of Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy.

 
I waited to write this post until after I had the opportunity to speak with SIGG CEO Steve Wasik. I am still disappointed. Over this last week we have learned that SIGG bottles manufactured before...
I waited to write this post until after I had the opportunity to speak with SIGG CEO Steve Wasik. I am still disappointed. Over this last week we have learned that SIGG bottles manufactured before...
 
 
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10:12 PM on 09/03/2009
Ok Sigg didn't say BPA, but testing showed no leaching. 1+1 is 2. I find it funny that you metnion this now..."(Full disclosure, I did get paid to moderate a Seventh Generation panel on industrial chemicals and health last fall)". Nice to squeeze that in as well, what other freebies do you have? Who can one really trust. Hey let's band Jello it has red#40 known to cause cancer. Oh but they print that on the box so it's okay ..right? Surprised by you Simran.
06:35 PM on 09/03/2009
First let me be completely Transparent and say that I work for a competitor to Sigg (Innate). One of the questions that does not seemed to be answered is why is SIgg changing the liner now. I can't help but wonder if it has something to do with pending and passed state and federal legislation which is banning products for kids that CONTAIN BPA,. These bans are not on products that leach BPA.This would have been a serious problem for sigg selling the old epoxy linning, but maybe I am just biased.
It is sad but it has really gone from a tell me world to a show me world, which is what makes Transparency so important. There are standards out there which test for BPA, Phthalates and Lead such as California Proposition 65, and there are independent, credible labs (SGS, recommended byt the CPSIA) that do such testing.
As consumers or citizens we can no longer blindly follow any company or person and must always be educating ourselves, that includes my company. Even those with the best of intentions are falible and human. Issues of Hybrid vs Gasoline vs Diesel as well as Aluminum vs steel vs polycarbonate are complex and they all have trade offs. We tend to set people and companies up on pedestals and then throw them on the bin heap when we discover their fault, neither is responsible in my rather verbous opinion
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Simran Sethi
08:36 PM on 09/03/2009
Thank you for your feedback. For me, the challenge lies in the fact that I DID do my homework. I asked about BPA, I researched it, and I expected I would be told the truth. In this instance what was NOT said was what got the company in trouble.
No citizen or corporate citizen is perfect, but neither should be dishonest.
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born 2b different
research b4 u post
01:30 PM on 09/04/2009
your idea of researching and doing your homework is to ask the manufacturer about the integrity of their product? real research would have consisted of getting the product independently tested.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SvrWx
Eileen, toora tooluri Eh..
05:19 PM on 09/03/2009
And all...I agree with GentleScotty...go out to a surplus store and buy an old aluminum canteen from the military. You can paint it up...get all artsy fartsy with it. Or just buy a Mason Jar and use that at work. I remember for awhile when I was in college, I use to fill those up and put them in my fridge for cold water. It tasted so good...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SvrWx
Eileen, toora tooluri Eh..
05:16 PM on 09/03/2009
All, just go back to Nalgene. They are now BPA free.
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Trilby
Like candy for dinner.
04:23 PM on 09/03/2009
This is getting so tiresome. All this agony over what to sip water from. Back in my day, we didn't go around sucking down water anywhere and everywhere, like a bunch of babies, and we LIKED it that way!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReedYoung
global mean temperature, obviously INCREASING
04:02 PM on 09/03/2009
quote:
I asked Wasik about pushing the responsibility back on to the consumer and he said, "We don't believe this is a recall but we know there are some consumers out there that are concerned. If we pay for this we'll get people who aren't concerned - which is about 9 out of 10 people - sending back bottles they bought three years ago that have dents in them."
/quote

Tough luck, Wasik. Consider it free market-imposed punitive damage, and eat it. And this:

http://www.lovebottle.net/store/pc/viewContent.asp?idpage=2#5
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Simran Sethi
12:26 PM on 09/08/2009
ReedYoung, Interestingly enough, Wasik has changed course and has now publicly announced they will be making exchanges easier. I like to think our efforts contributed to this new decision. . .http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-wasik/sigg-ceo-im-sorry_b_278291.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReedYoung
global mean temperature, obviously INCREASING
02:01 AM on 09/11/2009
I'll bet your efforts did contribute. The rule of publicity for corporations is opposite what it is for celebrities: all press is bad press.

I sort of shrugged off stories about contamination from plastics in the past, but the phrase "endocrine disruptors" and your concise, sourced summary of them got my attention.
01:04 PM on 09/03/2009
Thanks for the information Simran. I have been proudly carrying my SIGG bottle, thinking that the company was reputable and the bottles were BPA-free. I will be looking at other alternatives.

It is very important that we ensure these companies are doing what they claim.
09:09 AM on 09/03/2009
What a bunch of hens clucking away about nothing! I've used a surplus US Army stainless steel canteen for years. What's old is now new, again!
08:29 AM on 09/03/2009
Kleen Kanteen 's are 10 times better and BPA free , I never understood why people buy Sigg .

btw.. Sigg's look awful
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OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
05:51 AM on 09/03/2009
I wish I could say I was surprised, but I'm not.

It goes without saying that at SIGG $$ is job one. Being up front and honest with their retailers and end customers takes a back seat.

I have found that the food grade stainless steel (sans liner) from Kleen Kanteen to be as good as anything I have found so far.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HairFarmer
03:43 AM on 09/03/2009
yeah i read about the dangers w/ the sigg bottles today and ran to check which brand I have and was very happy to find that it was from a company called Ecousable, whose bottles are made of stainless steel ... sorry about your shock and heartbreak about sigg , throw out your siggs (or use em for watering hardy plants) and get a brand that is stainless steel and you will be satisfyed and not contaminated (at least from your bottle anyway)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
amoosefloats
Not a geek, a Tech Savvy Degenerate
03:40 AM on 09/03/2009
we have all fell subject to green washing, from Sigg, to the prius (new diesels are cleaner than gas and get better mileage than hybrids without all the collateral damage from the batteries and other metals needed to build them.) Also big polluters claiming to be carbon neutral just by buying a few trees. Once we demand clairty and sunshine on green/healthy product manufactures this trend will continue. Until then consumers need to dig for the underlying truth. Nalgene was financially devastated by the bpa effects yet they redesigned their bottles with little fanfare. They did the responsible thing and are not feeding off of health/green washing.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Simran Sethi
11:41 AM on 09/03/2009
I concur that it is very hard to keep info under wraps in this day and age. It was interesting to see companies that wanted to talk about hybrids also fight against improved fuel efficiency standards (http://dailynightly.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2007/11/13/464405.aspx). Empower thyself or caveat emptor.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ForVivi
Another button, another buttonhole.
01:11 AM on 09/03/2009
My husband and I have given up plastic water bottles in favor of Aquasana filter company's tall glass containers. there are insulated "Koozys" also available.

http://www.aquasana.com/category.php?category_id=6
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HairFarmer
03:45 AM on 09/03/2009
yhe sigg bottle are cast aluminum , not plastic...read the articles before posting , otherwise you appear uninformed
08:42 AM on 09/03/2009
I assumed "ForVivi" was just helpfully providing another type of bottle to use and did not get "uninformed" from her/his post at all. Why the need to be snarky?
11:32 AM on 09/03/2009
yes, your comment was snarky.
12:55 AM on 09/03/2009
Hi Simran,
Good to see that Steve Wasik's current stance is more conciliatory than a week ago when he left a defensive comment in response to my Huffington Post blog: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nena-baker/why-ill-swig-from-my-sigg_b_269603.html. That said, Wasik has yet to grasp the sense of betrayal that you and I and thousands of other once-loyal Sigg customers are feeling.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Simran Sethi
11:43 AM on 09/03/2009
Thanks, Nena. I appreciated the opportunity to speak with Mr. Wasik but was - as I said - still disappointed. I can count on one hand (well, a few fingers) the number of companies I would stand behind. I think I am down to exactly one. Betrayal, sadness and deep frustration. . .thank you so much for your enlightening post.
02:39 PM on 09/04/2009
The only way Sigg gets outta this mess is to fire or otherwise remove Wasick from his leadership post, then put all the blame on him and sink a couple million bucks into their new improved greenwashing campaign that will somehow once again trick green "experts" to promote aluminum and plastic as great healthy green products. everyone with a focused mind realizes that both aluminum and plastic (ANY plastic, even so-called "bpa-free" plastic, and yes even so-called bio-plastics) are not meant to be drank or eaten out of. A simple look at the low cost of producing these materials = ridiculously high profits, and the outrageous financial and political power of the petrochemical lobby are the true and obvious driving factors to these deceptive greedy corporate profits over human health products. It's wake-up time! Don't be once again bowled over with the corporate deception of greenwashers like sigg or nalgene (triton plastics the new safe polycarbonate...C'mon now, please get a grip on reality..) how bout checking in with Patricia Hunt, or Theo Colburn, or Fred Vom Saal... the real experts in this realm.
11:22 PM on 09/02/2009
This is really a shame - thanks for posting your findings. Everytime I would walk in to Whole Foods and see those beautiful SIGG bottles, I felt a tug from my wallet. I decided to not spend the money due to the poor economy while I still hated drinking out of my old sports bottle and fearing contaminants. I would have really been broken-hearted had I purchased one and made a budget sacrifice and read this blog. How can the CEO sleep at night? This is completely unethical and makes me sad for all the buyers who unlike me were lied about the product. There should be a full product recall with all costs for mailing paid by SIGG. Clearly the CEO is thinking short-term - get all the money he can and get out of the market as he is destroying the goodwill long-term value of his brand.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HairFarmer
03:47 AM on 09/03/2009
get a stainless steel one , I have an Ecousable bottle an di love it .. no liner no contaminants... just plain non toxic