The drinks industry said it was already involved in efforts to educate the public on safe drinking.
Note that many Appropriate Technologies benefit public health, in particular by providing sanitation and safe drinking water.
Poverty and ignorance about health run so deep that even safe drinking is rare.
Apart from many other initiatives, it has produced some good information in the form of leaflets, books, videos etc, advocating safer drinking.
And second, they could hamper efforts to provide legitimate and useful education about safe drinking.
Warning labels won't foster safe drinking among the general population.
I wouldn't feel safe drinking with someone who spilled everything he knew.
Some, like ours, have a pump at a well with cloudy but safe drinking water, outhouses and picnic tables.
Is there a magic threshold at 7 or 14 or 21 units per week that demarcates safe and unsafe drinking?
Its primary emphasis would be on providing safe, affordable, and sustainable drinking water, sanitation, and hygiene.