This is an excerpt from a pretty interesting article I found online after Dan and I heard on the news that San Francisco is banning city departments from purchasing bottled water. I cut some out towards the end.
The Real Cost of Bottled Water
By Jared Blumenfeld and Susan Leal
Courtesy of The San Francisco Chronicle,
2/18/2007
San Franciscans and other Bay Area residents enjoy some of the nation's highest quality drinking water, with pristine Sierra snowmelt from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir as our primary source. Every year, our water is tested more than 100,000 times to ensure that it meets or exceeds every standard for safe drinking water. And yet we still buy bottled water. Why?
Maybe it's because we think bottled water is cleaner and somehow better, but that's not true. The federal standards for tap water are higher than those for bottled water.
The Environmental Law Foundation has sued eight bottlers for using words such as "pure" to market water that contains bacteria, arsenic and chlorine. Bottled water is no bargain either: It costs 240 to 10,000 times more than tap water. For the price of one bottle of Evian, a San Franciscan can receive 1,000 gallons of tap water. Forty percent of bottled water should be labeled bottled tap water because that is exactly what it is. But even that doesn't dampen the demand.
Clearly, the popularity of bottled water is the result of huge marketing efforts. The global consumption of bottled water reached 41 billion gallons in 2004, up 57 percent in just five years. Even in areas where tap water is clean and safe to drink, such as in San Francisco, demand for bottled water is increasing -- producing unnecessary garbage and consuming vast quantities of energy. So what is the real cost of bottled water?
Most of the price of a bottle of water goes for its bottling, packaging, shipping, marketing, retailing and profit. Transporting bottled water by boat, truck and train involves burning massive quantities of fossil fuels. More than 5 trillion gallons of bottled water is shipped internationally each year. Here in San Francisco, we can buy water from Fiji (5,455 miles away) or Norway (5,194 miles away) and many other faraway places to satisfy our demand for the chic and exotic. These are truly the Hummers of our bottled-water generation. As further proof that the bottle is worth more than the water in it, starting in 2007, the state of California will give 5 cents for recycling a small water bottle and 10 cents for a large one.
So it is clear that bottled water directly adds to environmental degradation, global warming and a large amount of unnecessary waste and litter. All this for a product that is often inferior to San Francisco's tap water. Luckily, there are better, less expensive alternatives:
In the office, use a water dispenser that taps into tap water. The only difference your company will notice is that you're saving a lot of money.
At home and in your car, switch to a stainless steel water bottle and use it for the rest of your life knowing that you are drinking some of the nation's best water and making the planet a better place.
If you want to read more, check this article out at:
http://www.slowfoodusa.org/change/02-29-07_take_action.html
Saturday, June 23, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Incidentally, Slow Food USA is responsible for that run of wierd short films I subjected you and Dan to at AFI in Silver Spring. I swear, if given the chance, I will make it up to you with Jaws, or Indiana Jones, or something much cooler than the original experience.
I'm not sure if the tap H2O in DC is the same as SF. I love the name Hetch Hetchy Reservoir. It reminds me of the highway in Hawaii called Likey Likey.
Julia baby!!
I read your blogs all the time but never comment (like i'm a listener to a radio station but never call in). Anyways, I just wanted to let you know that this entry inspired me to change my drinking habits (and those around me!). I bought several Sigg aluminum bottles for my everyday water drinking pleasure... and one for Derek, my cousin Bonnie, her brother Victor and my mother! I hope you're proud of me! See you back at home soon!
Post a Comment