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Bottled Water's Shocking Impacts and the Growing Opposition

By AlterNet Staff, AlterNet. Posted August 5, 2008.


Here are two stories that show the huge impacts of bottled water and the pressure the industry is receiving lately from consumers and officials.

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Editor's Note: We've been following the rising grassroots movement against the bottled water industry. And it looks like the hard work is paying off. According to one group working on the issue, "In May, Nestle reported that its bottled water profits had dropped, acknowledging 'criticism of bottled water' as a factor in decreased sales. According to Beverage Marketing Corporation, last year the U.S. bottled water industry experienced its slowest annual revenue growth in more than 15 years." Below you'll find two stories that show what's going on in the fight against bottled water.

Tap Has 1/100 the Impact of Bottled Water by Graham Hill, Huffington Post

We have forgotten about our closest source of water at home -- the tap. Yet one of the simplest ways to reduce our environmental impact, to save money (not a ton...yet!) and to free ourselves from shopping and storage hassle, is by saying goodbye to bottled water. A life cycle assessment commissioned by the Swiss Gas and Water Association traced the entire life cycle from water extraction to serving it up in a glass.

Their findings showed that tap water has less than one percent of the impacts of un-refrigerated bottled water. Even when the tap water is refrigerated its impact is only one quarter of that of bottled water. These astonishing figures show that tap water is hands-down the greenest and most responsible choice.

The biggest impacts for bottled water come from the refrigeration, packaging and transport. Refrigeration also substantially increased the impacts of the tap water scenarios thanks to the energy consumed to power the fridge. Returnable bottles and jugs had lesser overall impacts when the distances for their transport were short. But as the distances increase, the higher weight glass bottles resulted in an "on the whole" higher environmental impact as compared to the PET bottles.

This reminds us that transportation plays a big role in the impacts of bottled water, more so than even packaging in this case. The origin of the water causes the biggest impact and so the distance between the bottling site and you must be as short as possible to reduce impacts -- this is a pretty hard factor to control as a consumer. Hear that Fiji? When that distance is short, then returnable bottles become a viable alternative. As the distance gets bigger, the returnables cause more impact because of their higher weight.

Packaging (something tap water has none of) is also a problem when you look at the environmental impacts of bottled water. The Earth Policy Institute tells us that 17 million barrels of oil are used annually to meet American demand for bottled water. That's enough to fuel more than 1 million U.S. cars per year. Almost 2.7 million tons of plastic are used worldwide to bottle water each year while 90% of those end up in landfills. And to think that for the most part, we don't even need bottled water at all.

That's an enormous amount of waste for water that has no real added health benefits. If you do choose to hydrate yourself via the bottled stuff you will be causing almost 100 times more impact than if you fill your cup from the tap. Not all tap water tastes the same, but the truth is that tap water is actually more strictly controlled by the Environmental Protection Agency than bottled water is by the Food and Drug Administration. If you really can't stand the tap try a filtered jug at home or a filter for your faucet.


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See more stories tagged with: water, bottled water, nestle, think outside the bottle, mccloud california

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View:
Any cheaper alternatives to Brita for (relatively) chlorine-free water?
Posted by: aouie01 on Aug 5, 2008 2:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember a cheaper alternative to Brita was bought by Brita many years ago. Any suggestions? Preferably something that can make the water (relatively) flourine-free too.
Sincerely,
Aouie

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» Yes Posted by: socialpsych
impacts
Posted by: socialpsych on Aug 5, 2008 4:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"In the worst cases, Nestle's water grab ruins streams, ponds, wells and aquifers."

In fact, in virtually ALL cases water extraction on the scale practiced by Nestle and the other water parasites does significant harm to water sources and their ecological systems. If those industries continue to destroy aquifers and watersheds, there won't be much potable fresh water left for anyone. And what's left will be for sale to the highest bidder.

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Send Maine's Water Activists a "High Five"
Posted by: Royelen on Aug 5, 2008 4:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The corporate giant Nestlé met its match when it wandered into Wells, Maine with the notion that it could contract to take between a quarter of a million and half a million gallons of the community's water each day for its Poland Springs brand. Local folks said, "No."

Inspired by the Maine activists who got the contract tabled? Send 'em a "high five."

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otto
Posted by: otto on Aug 5, 2008 5:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maude Barlow, founder of Council of Canadians and author of two books on water, leads the campaign here in Canada too. She points out that even here in Canada, supposedly the country with the most water in the world, we are in danger of running out of what we need...especially if plans are carried out to pipe water from Canada down to the southwest U.S. (for their golf courses, as well as real needs!) Also, studies have shown a danger of poison from the plastic in bottled water.

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Some Problems with Tap
Posted by: Ratskii on Aug 5, 2008 5:22 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the city I live in (Upper Midwest) the tap water is often barely drinkable. In the spring and early summer especially, it tastes like fish. Sometimes the sediment at the bottom of the pipes gets stirred up and it comes out of the faucet yellow or brown. Even at its best, in the winter, there is a certain eau de chlorine about the flavor. Furthermore, the chlorine can form compounds with other chemicals in the water that are carcinogenic.

The article makes a tiny mention of filtered water as an alternative. It costs 39 cents a gallon at stores that sell it, or one can install one's own filter system(if you own you home). I'm not certain what the comparative environmental impact is (I use the same bottles repeatedly to buy refills), but there are health issues with tap water that aren't addressed in the article.

It is important that the filtering process include a reverse osmosis filter, to get the chlorine compounds out.

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» RE: Some Problems with Tap Posted by: brunowe
» RE: Some Problems with Tap Posted by: Ratskii
Stop drinking bottled water but do not force me!
Posted by: Libertarian Paternalist on Aug 5, 2008 6:24 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is all good and well that those that oppose the use of drinking bottled water should advocate that. They have however no right whatsoever to force me to stop.

I live in Florida and the water quality is so bad that even after filtering the water tastes so bad. Back home in Sweden i always drank tap water but in the US there is no way I will drink tap water. It either tastes like sewage or is so chlorinated that it is virtually undrinkable.

I make other accommodations in my economy but will not give up my bottled water.

But the underlying message of the tap water purists is that they want to forbid, ban the use of bottled water.

Purist are often absolutist and alway wants to forbid and ban instead of enlighten, they think that ordinary people are to stupid to understand and therefore most be forced to come to their senses.

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» Doing environmental damage, in whose opinion? Posted by: Libertarian Paternalist
Bottled Water Contains Phthalates
Posted by: PaulK on Aug 5, 2008 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Phthalates, also called plasticizers, are chemicals that keep your plastic bottles flexible.

Phthalates leach from the bottled water containers into the water, especially when the containers are heated in the sun. You don't know whether the containers were treated properly. Also, you don't know how many months those bottles have been sitting in a warehouse leaching phthalates. The real mistreatment of bottles awards go to the U.S. Army, which boils those bottles in the Iraqi sun every day.

Also, freezing bottles so that you can have ice cubes drives the phthalates out of the plastic too.

Phthalates encourage the growth of cancerous cells. Phthalates also inhibit the growth of killer T cells.

Would the government ever allow anything on the market that might possibly harm you?

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I'm all for ...
Posted by: tvaspen on Aug 5, 2008 8:18 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
getting rid of bottled water. But until they take the chlorine and flouride out of my tap water, I,m going to need an alternative.

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» Distill your water. Posted by: Ignatz deFyre
» RE: Distill your water. Posted by: Ratskii
Jack
Posted by: jgk008 on Aug 5, 2008 12:02 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The anti-bottled water people need to get their facts straight. BW is not an environmental menace. Its a choice like any other.

OK, fine, so ban bottled water. Get rid of it. I'd love to see what you do when your community is hit by a hurricane, fire, flood, water main break, what have you. Do you really think it's feasible to carry a reusable bottle everywhere you go? Of course not. If anything, turn the discussion onto sodas, but stop taking it out on an easy target.

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Tax It
Posted by: edgar1 on Aug 5, 2008 4:00 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We tax cigarettes. We tax gasoline(not enough but no politician will stand up and say so).

Why not a tax on the oil-based plastic for the water? For you runners and workout lovers out there, you could buy one taxed six pack, keep the bottles around, and fill them with tap. Or just get one plastic bottle at your supermarket or Target type store, and fill it with tap.

The bottled water phenom is a triumph of Madison Ave that is only equalled by the cigarette ads of the first half of the 20th century. Bottled water = Health. Oh please.

The world, and the US in particular, is running out of clean, affordable water. And this is the best we can do?

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i was in mexico recently and thank goddess for bottled water
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Aug 5, 2008 7:50 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i was in mexico recently and thank goddess for bottled water. i brought mexico back with me in the form of everything i ate making me ill for more than a week after my return home (i'm veg).
at home, i refill a stainless steel bottle as much as possible. but waterfountains in san francisco? full of spit, gum, homeless person skank. if there was a sanitary way to have public water dispensed without the risk of infection and skank, that would rock.

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Water Filter Recommendation
Posted by: mishawaka on Aug 5, 2008 9:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in an apartment above a residence and I use a countertop water filter. After doing some internet research on what I wanted and needed, I decided to go with a filter from a company called Pure Earth Technologies (www.pure-earth.com). They offer a range of different filters with different filter elements depending on your needs or preferences. While the up front cost is higher (mine was $120), the filter only needs to be replaced every 1-2 years, depending on your water quality. That is much more economical than a Brita or Pur faucet filter. The company is small and based in Georgia, USA. I recommend them highly.

Can anyone tell me a good bottle to use from day to day? I hear bad things about aluminum bottles. Is stainless steel the way to go? Or should I get a "friendly" plastic bottle?

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» kleen kanteen is pretty good.... Posted by: veggiegrrrl
A bad choice either way
Posted by: nfamous on Aug 6, 2008 7:26 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm tired of reading all of these articles about the damage that bottled water causes to the environment. They never address the fluorine and other toxic chemicals that are being put in most of the water in the US. If it's between me poisoning the environment or poisoning myself, I choose the environment. I will definitely look into procuring one of those reverse osmosis filters.

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justgreenleaf
Posted by: justgreenleaf on Aug 6, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OK. So make bottled water illegal. And all current plastic bottles in use will not be accepted in trash collection. They can only be recycled or reused forever at home.
It's not that hard.

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If tap water does not stink, do not hesitate
Posted by: Marc02 on Aug 7, 2008 2:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We live 50 miles east of Paris, France, in a small village and we have a privilege : being connected to natural springs, and not water they try to purify from rivers.
We have been drinking tap water for 27 years now and are also making Nestle and co weep.
For the majority of inhabitants we are regarded as silly, because many go on paying a lot of money for something they can have for far less at home.
True, we are swallowing some fertilizers when drinking tap water (we have never been sick), but knowing where the bottling factory of Cristaline a famous brand in France is situated, I suspect this water is not fertilizers free.
In theory, we have the possibility to recycle plastic bottles, but spotting the litter bins in the village (garbage is collected only once a week) I have been horrified to see that about 60% of inhabitants throw away in the same bag all their rubbish which is simply burnt, thank you for the atmosphere!
We are trying to "preach" for drinking tap water, but unfortunately many people only rely to tv ads where they have been trying to invent something new for 40 years to persuade citizens drinking bottled water is the safest way (water stored outside under the sun, I suppose germs love it!).
So if you local water is not smelly (chlorine or sewers smell) do not hesitate : drink it, save money and the environment.
Marc

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Waterlogged
Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com on Aug 7, 2008 5:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Water without a doubt is the most precious resource on the Big Blue Marble; but as we have seen over time, how bottled water has dominated our lives and on shelf space in stores.
It's to the point where we disdain drinking it from the tap and this resource is controlled by several companies like Arrowhead, Fiji, Evian; and lesser known companies like Crystal Geyser and other regional bottling independents. It's not known how much money is spent on bottled water, but the profits sure can run into the billions.
Today it comes in various flavors like ice cream or Kool-Aid or sold as sports drink-"fitness" water; and that defies logic. Even the nutritional "value" of flavored water is printed on the side.
But what is revealing is that in California, bottled water is preferred to tap. All this means that some are leery of drinking it from the tap and spending their hard-earned money on bottled water, thinking it's safer.
But as we're gleaned from the article, pressure is mounting on these bottlers to reduce the carbon footprint on the environment and somehow reduce the incredible amount of plastic water bottles we use. I bet the number of recycled bottles could fill up New Jersey. I'm only speculating, but today there are better ways to get a drink without paying several dollars to buy it.
And mostly our drinking water is relatively safe to drink, whereas in other areas water has to be boiled or treated with tablets to reduce the effluents in it.

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