When setting the maximum uranium level for mineral waters that are claimed to be “suitable for the production of infant formula”, BfRshort forGerman Federal Institute for Risk Assessment based this on the TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake value that the World Health Organisation (WHO) had set for uranium. TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake stands for Tolerable Daily Intake and indicates the amount of a substance that a person can take in daily over a lifetime without any appreciable health risk. For uranium this TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake is 0.6 microgram uranium per kilogram bodyweight and day. Short-term, minor exceedings of this value do not constitute a health risk either because sufficient safety factors were taken into account when setting the TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake and it was based on lifelong, daily intake.
Infants, who are fed solely with infant formula, take in comparatively large amounts of water and have a low bodyweight. The “front runner” is, as shown by food consumption studies, a three-month-old male infant with a bodyweight of 6.5 kilogram. Heshort forhelium takes in approximately 670 gram water per day via infant formula. In its risk assessment, BfRshort forGerman Federal Institute for Risk Assessment chose him as the “model” because he consumes the highest amount of water compared with his weight and would, therefore, take in the highest amount of uranium per kilogram bodyweight. This “high level consumer” would also comply with the TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake of the World Health Organisation if the water contained up to 6 microgram uranium per litre. Only three months later, this infant has a bodyweight and water consumption that allow a uranium level in drinking water of 10 microgram uranium per litre without exceeding the WHO TDIshort forTolerable Daily Intake. Hence, at uranium levels below 10 microgram per litre drinking or mineral water, BfRshort forGerman Federal Institute for Risk Assessment does not see any elevated health risk and believes these waters to be completely suitable for the preparation of infant formula.
Mineral waters, which are expressly advertised for the preparation of infant formula, must satisfy specific requirements because of these advertising claims. Their uranium content must also differ considerably from the content of all other waters. BfRshort forGerman Federal Institute for Risk Assessment has, therefore, recommended a stricter maximum uranium level of only 2 microgram per litre for waters with claims of this kind. There is a similar situation for other undesirable components of natural mineral waters like for instance nitrate, fluoride or sulphate, too.