Bottled Water Lite?
Our country is having a bi-polar moment with regards to bottled water.
On one hand Americans love their bottled water. Each year our
consumption of bottled water rises about 10 percent. Last year alone
Americans gulped down 8.3 billion gallons of bottled water, and spent
$11 billion along the way.
On the other hand, Americans are starting to think outside the bottle,
and recognize how potentially wasteful and expensive drinking bottled
water can be. Studies show that eight out of 10 plastic water bottles
end up in landfills (not recycling bins) each year. Add to that a
little fact that consumers seem to forget--plastic is made from
petroleum, meaning that the chilled bottle of water that you just
pulled out of your gym's refrigerator case came from a ton of fossil
fuels. The Pacific Institute estimates that it took 17 million barrels
of oil last year to make plastic water bottles. That doesn't really
whet your appetite for a cold, prepackaged bottle of water, now does
it?
Enter the bottled water industry, which is trying to make the best of
both worlds--get people to continue drinking bottled water but make it
appear to be a green thing to do. What got me thinking about this was
the recent news that Burger King has kicked Pepsi-Cola's Aquafina to
the curb in favor of Nestle waters' new "eco-friendly" bottled water
called Pure Life. According to Nestle these bottles are better for the
earth because they are made using a thinner layer of plastic that
doesn't require as much petroleum, and because of this, the bottles
are easier to recycle.
OK, so good for Nestle for trying to make a step in the right green
direction but that doesn't solve the problem of people not recycling
their plastic water bottles, does it? Thin, easier-to-recycle plastic
or not, if most water bottles end up in the trash, then we haven't
really solved any problems in the long run, have we? (By the way, Coke
isn't getting off easy these days: the Tappening campaign plans to
deluge Coke's headquarters with one million plastic water bottles when
the new CEO takes office later this year.)
Here's what I'd like to see: fast-food restaurants taking a page from
coffee shops. I'm thinking of the ones that let you bring your own
reusable and refillable coffee mug into the shop, and then they reward
you by giving you a discount on your Joe because you saved them from
using a cup. Why can't I bring my reusable water bottle with me to a
restaurant and use it to hold my soda or, gasp, tap water? And why
can't the Burger Kings and McDonald's of the world reward me for doing
so?
In the meantime, save yourself the dough with bottled water (which is
three times as expensive as gas these days), and just don't buy it.
Instead, invest in a reusable water bottle, such as the "Filter for
Good" bottle from the people at Nalgene and Brita water filters, and
take it with you everywhere. If you don't like the taste of your tap
water, put a filter on the faucet or get one of those filtered water
pitchers that you can fill and keep in the fridge, thus giving you
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