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Water

Tap Has 1/100 the Impact of Bottled Water

By Graham Hill, Huffington Post. Posted July 31, 2008.


A life cycle assessment traced the entire life cycle from water extraction to serving it up in a glass.
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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.

Convinced yet?

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Yeah well taste the water where I live
Posted by: Libsrule on Jul 31, 2008 4:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love how people assume that just because a few places they have tested has wonderful water means we all do.

Everyone who has ever come to our house has said the same thing when I give them a small glass of our tap water....ewwww. Smells bad(not overwhelmingly so) and has a not very good taste, so we use bottled water to drink and give the doggies we have. There is a very good place down the road, which quite a few people use that sells water that has been purified and tastes and smells 100% better and it's relatively inexpensive.

Complaints to the local water boards go unheeded and generally they could care less, they are making a bundle and spending anything to make the water better isn't on their agenda. In fact I am still trying to find out what "Demand Units" really means because that's an extra SIXTY bucks they tack onto our bill every month and no one can explain what it is.

So sure bottled water may be environmentally unsound but given the choice....well we recycle anyway. No bottle goes into the general trash.

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Uhh... No thanks.
Posted by: on Aug 4, 2008 11:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I lived in Rochester, NY, the tap water wasn't bad at all. Then I moved to the Charlotte, NC area (woe is me), and the tap water is atrocious. I've literally turned on the bathtub tap and seen very brown water come out--and not just for a couple minutes; it kept coming and coming. I wasn't even willing to bathe my daughter in that sewage, let alone allow anyone to drink it.

Then I moved to a different city in the Charlotte metro area, and the water is still disgusting. The one time I tried drinking it was to make coffee. It was so utterly disgusting to smell and taste I couldn't force it down.

I very strongly suspect that if my tap water is that disgusting to the senses--even the eyes, for crying out loud!--it must be very unhealthy to drink.

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bradm
Posted by: bradm on Aug 5, 2008 7:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are many filter options available that improve tap water. The price ranges from very inexpensive to expensive, but there is an affordable alternative for most. The use of a reusable glass bottle (free) and filtered tap water is such a no-brainer that it's inconceivable to me the bottled water industry can continue to flourish as our culture seeks to lessen energy consumption.

I am in the business of placing bottleless water coolers in offices. One can show people a better, greener, and less expensive way to handle their office water; surprisingly, many people are so attached to their bottle, the alternative falls on deaf ears.

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Think Outside The Bottle
Posted by: tortor54 on Aug 5, 2008 8:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Over the last 20 years the bottled water industry has changed the way we think about water. Using their deceptive marketing, corporations like Coke, Pepsi, and Nestle have successfully convinced one in five Americans that the only way to get safe water is to buy it from them. To learn more about Corporate Accountability International's campaign challenging corporate control of our most precious natural resource check out:

www.thinkoutsdiethebottle.org

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