Posts Tagged ‘Bottled Water’


Bottled Water On Campus: Under “Water”

Thursday, March 1st, 2012

I have written in the past about my views on bottled water and the movement to ban it  on several college campuses. Recently, Charles Fishman, an award winning investigative journalist and author of The Big Thirst posted a blog on National Geographic website that while pointing out the numerous problems and environmental impacts of bottled water went on to argue that:

“Banning bottled water doesn’t really teach anyone anything.”

His argument, which makes a lot of sense, is that banning bottled water sales on campus, while allowing the sale of soda and energy drinks is illogical. He points out that these products are 95% to 99% water and that, “It takes 2.5 liters of water to produce every liter of Coke products”.

Fishman points out the negative environmental impacts of bottled water, stating that “It takes a fleet equivalent to 40,000 18-wheelers just to deliver the bottled water Americans buy every week”. However, he questions whether this is any different than the fleets delivering caramel-colored, caffienated water in bottles?

Fishman is no stranger to the negative impacts of bottled water. I highly recommend his 2007 article, Message in a Bottle which explores the bottled water phenomenon in depth. In that article he determines that:

“Buying bottled water is a choice … and given the impact it has, the easy substitutes, and the thoughtless spending involved, it’s fair to ask whether it’s always a good choice.”

In my opinion, that question has been answered over and over. Due to its negative environmental impacts, bottled water is only a good choice where there is not access to safe reliable tap water. On most college campuses in the U.S. safe drinking water is readily available, as are reusable bottles.

USA Today states that according to the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE), 14 colleges and universities in the United States and Canada have campus-wide bans, while another dozen or so have bans that cover a portion of campus. While these bans are a step in the right direction by creating awareness of the negative impacts of bottled water, by not addressing the environmental and health impacts of the remaining beverages, including soda and energy drinks, they fall far short of promoting an overall sustainable college environment.

However, recently the University of Vermont became one of the first universities in the U.S. to not only ban the sale of bottled water but to mandate that one-third of the beverages in its campus vending machines be healthy options. The policy also has the University changing its drinking fountains into bottle refilling stations so that students can use refillable bottles instead of using, and disposing, of plastic water bottles.

Wisebread.com has listed 22 reasons to stop drinking soda – Here are a few of my favorites:

  • It may lead to diabetes and heart disease.
  • Soda consumption is linked to osteoporosis.
  • Drinking cola can increase your risk of kidney stones.
  • It can take up to 132 gallons of water to produce a 2-liter bottle of soda.
  • Be it glass, aluminum, or plastic, all bottles have their environmental costs.
  • Transportation of soda pop requires a lot of fuel.

Sustainability has social, environmental and economic dimensions. Given the health and environmental impacts that soda has, the fact that the United States, with less than 5 percent of the world’s population, is the largest soda consumer and accounted for one third of total soda consumption in 1999, suggests that Fishman is correct that only banning water bottles on campus is not enough. To truly address the societal and environmental costs, our colleges and universities should, as did the University of Vermont, require the availability in vending machines, in dorms, food service on campus, healthier alternatives to soda.

Here is a very interesting infographic about why you should not drink bottled water …
infographic about bottled water and why we should not drink it.
Let me know what you think about bottled water and soda issues on campuses around the country, please leave a comment below!


Bottled Water Strikes Back! Or at least tries to

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

Previously, I posted about many of the problems with our obsession with Bottled Water. These include the millions of plastic bottles that do not get recycled and will last for many years in landfills, the environmental cost of transportation, and the negative effect on our aquifers for the millions of gallons of water pumped from our ground waters, streams and lakes. Apparently, I am not alone in seeing a negative side to this phenomenon. Many people and organizations have tried or succeeded in banning the sales of bottled water.

Washington University in St. Louis, MO has banned the sale of bottled water on campus.  Other campuses banning the sale of bottled water include Seattle University and the University of Wisconsin – Stephen Point, Belmont University, Oberlin College, University of Ottawa and University of Portland. Some campuses have not banned the sale of bottled water, but no longer serve it in the dinning halls. These include Gonzaga University, New York University, Stanford University, Stony Brook University and the University of Maryland.

Universities are not the only groups trying to stem the rising tide of bottled water sales and the problem associated therewith. The Dave Mathews Band has partnered with Brita FilterForGood to reduce the amount of bottled water sold at their concerts. Brita’s FilterForGood will provide fans and performers access to free Brita® filtered water. Festival-goers can ditch their bottled water and instead fill up using reusable bottles so that everyone has an opportunity to help reduce the festival’s environmental footprint.

Faced with increasing vocal green opposition to their product, the bottled water industry has decided to fight back. The International Bottled Water Association (IBWA) on Wednesday took on what it described as a “a myth repeated by some anti-bottled water activists that bottled water which comes from municipal water sources is just tap water in a bottle.” They posted a video on YouTube that purports to show how they filter and purify their water prior to being bottled.

Once again, the bottled water industry has missed the point. While one of my problems is that most of the US has access to good drinking water, making their product an unnecessary expense, the bigger issue is the bottles themselves and the energy it takes to get the product to the consumer. Add to that the fact that only about 27% of water bottles actually get recycled.  The rest end up in landfills. Even when they are recycled, they have to be transported to the recycling facility, ground up and then transported to be melted into pellets for reuse. That is not a small carbon footprint.

In addition, there are some who believe that the chemicals in PET bottles are harmful to humans. There is evidence that PET bottles may leach harmful endocrine disrupting phthalates.

The IBWA should be ashamed of themselves. They are producing a slickly made video promoting their billion dollar business focusing only on the supposed purity of their product and not the numerous harmful environmental effects of their product. There are numerous reasons why bottled water is bad for the environment. Here are a few:

  • We pay three to four times the cost of gasoline for a product that comes free out of the tap.
  • We move almost 40,000 18-wheelers worth of water around the country every week–a tremendous waste of energy resources.
  • It takes three times the water in a bottle to produce the bottle and fill it.

Clearly, bottled water is not the answer to our need for good clean hydration. Use a refillable water bottle and fill it from your tap. You will be saving money, saving resources, protecting your health and reducing your carbon footprint.


Below is an infographic detailing the top importer and exporters of bottled water in the world.

Some art students started a neat “boxed” water company in response to the major issues of the bottled water industry. Please take a minute to check out Boxed Water, started in Grand Rapids, MI. They have good sustainable ideas behind their company. If isn’t a solution at least it’s a start.
Check out this awesome new company!

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Nestle Hires Sustainability Director – Too Late to Save Michigan’s Water

Monday, February 21st, 2011
Water Bottle
On February 17, 2011, Nestle Waters North America announced it had hired a new Director of Sustainability. We wish Michael Washburn well in his new role and in his efforts “To increase recycling rates in the United States.” We applaud Nestle for hiring someone who has worked in the nonprofit sector, and held a senior position at The Wilderness Society working on public lands advocacy.
Here at Maxi Container, however, we still hold Nestle responsible for two of the most egregious environmental policies and practices of this era.
First, they sell millions of plastic water bottles, consuming inordinate amounts of energy and raw materials to deliver a product that most of us in the U.S. has at our fingertips, potable water.
Second, they are one of the largest companies diverting a precious resource from our home state of Michigan, paying little or nothing for it, and making a large profit by selling it at a ridiculous mark up.
Nestle Waters U.S. brands include, Arrowhead, Calistoga, Deep Park, Ice Mountain, Nestle Pure Life, Ozarka, Poland Spring and Zepherhills. Nestle has had a series of battles in and out of court in both Mecosta and Osceola, MI regarding its plans for its bottling plant to bottle over 720,000 gallons of water pumped from the Great Lakes Basin and aquifer per day. Water which is never replaced and has led to drying of wetlands and streams and lowering of lake levels.  It has also severly affected nearby homeowners and farmers who depend on the aquifer for their drinking water and irrigation.
In 2009, after 9 years of litigation, Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation reached an out of court settlement with Nestle to reduce Nestle’s pumping to 218 gallons per minute.  Over an 8 hour day that is still 104,640 gallons. Over 24 hours, that is 313,920 gallons of water per day taken from our precious Great Lakes and never returned. Add to that the cost of the resources used to bottle and truck that water all over the country and you now have the makings of one of the greatest environmental villains ever!
To learn more, see our Oprep article and watch The Story of Bottled Water (2010)
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