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The Trouble with Bottled Water

Elizabeth Royte reflects on the backlash against commercializing a natural resource and responds to reader comments

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  • By Elizabeth Royte
  • Smithsonian.com, April 14, 2008, Subscribe
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In the spring of 2007, the quietly simmering backlash against bottled water began to boil. Responding to well-organized pressure groups, first one, and then a dozen cities across the nation canceled their contracts for bottled-water delivery. Upscale restaurants struck fancy waters from their menus, and college students conducted taste tests intended to prove, once and for all, that most people can't tell the difference between bottled water and tap.

Suddenly bottled water was big news. Every time I opened a newspaper, magazine or Web browser, there was another story announcing that this harmless indulgence is anything but. On the lookout for this sort of material, I nearly drowned in the tidal wave of eco-criticism. With a mounting sense of anticipation—how far will the attacks go?—I watched as reporters, using statistics from academics and environmental groups, blasted away at the bottled-water industry. But curiously, their focus wasn't water, at first. It was oil.

Specifically, the 17 million barrels it takes each year to make water bottles for the U.S. market. (Plastic-making also generates emissions of nickel, ethylbenzene, ethylene oxide, and benzene, but because we're in the thick of the global-warming movement, not the environmental-carcinogen movement, this doesn't get much play.) That's enough oil to fuel 1.3 million cars for a year.

Is 17 million barrels a lot? Yes and no. Total U.S. oil consumption is 20 million barrels a day. But the oil that goes into water bottles themselves doesn't include the energy needed to fill them or to move them to consumers. Every week, a billion bottles snake through the country on tens of thousands of trucks, trains and ships. (In 2007, Poland Spring alone burned 928,226 gallons of diesel fuel.) And then there's the energy it takes to chill water in fridges and to haul the empties off to landfills. It adds up.

Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute, estimates that the total energy required for every bottle's production, transport and disposal is equivalent, on average, to filling that bottle a quarter of the way with oil. His finding, undisputed by the water-bottling industry, shocks me. Oil, as we know, is a nonrenewable resource, mostly imported. The hunt for more oil is politically dangerous and expensive, and can be environmentally ruinous.

And then there's the water itself—increasingly important as we enter what's been called the post-Peak Water era. Manufacturing and filling plastic water bottles consumes twice as much water as the bottle will ultimately contain, in part because bottle-making machines are cooled by water. Plants that use reverse osmosis to purify tap water lose between three and nine gallons of water—depending on how new the filters are and what they remove—for every filtered gallon that ends up on the shelf. Cleaning a bottling plant also requires a great deal of municipal water, especially if the end product is flavored. On average, only 60 to 70 percent of the water used by bottling plants ends up on supermarket shelves: the rest is waste.

These costs—water, energy, oil—aren't unique to bottled water. It takes 48 gallons of water to make a gallon of beer, four gallons of water to make one of soda. Even a cow has a water footprint, drinking four gallons of water to produce one gallon of milk. But those other beverages aren't redundant to the calorie-free (and caffeine- and coloring-free) liquid that comes out of the tap, and that's an important distinction.

As 2007 wound down, bottled water sales slowed a bit, but it's hard to say if it was due to activist pressure, cool weather, high prices (oil costs more) or, as Nestlé Waters North America CEO Kim Jeffery says, a lack of natural disasters, which always spur demand. In any event, billions of cases of water continued to march out of supermarkets, and millions of bottles dribbled from everyplace else.

"People don't go backwards," says Arthur Von Wiesenberger, author of The Pocket Guide to Bottled Water and a consultant to the beverage industry. "Once they've developed a taste for bottled water, they won't give it up." Indeed, new bottling plants opened this past year in the United States, Europe, India and Canada; and entrepreneurs announced plans to bottle water in the Amazon, among other fragile landscapes, while Nestlé—the Swiss conglomerate that owns Poland Spring, Calistoga and many other U.S. brands of spring water, not to mention the French Perrier—continues to buy and explore new spring sites.

Overall, Americans drank 29.3 gallons of bottled water per capita in 2007, up from 27.6 gallons in 2006, with the 2007 wholesale revenue for bottled water in the U.S. exceeding $11.7 billion.

Still, among a certain psychographic, bottled water, not so long ago a chic accessory, is now the mark of the devil, the moral equivalent of driving a Hummer. No longer socially useful, it's shunned in many restaurants, where ordering tap is all the rage. Writing in Slate, Daniel Gross calls this new snob appeal entirely predictable. "So long as only a few people were drinking Evian, Perrier, and San Pellegrino, bottled water wasn't perceived as a societal ill. Now that everybody is toting bottles of Poland Spring, Aquafina, and Dasani, it's a big problem."

But is it fashion or is it rising awareness of the bottle's environmental toll that's driving the backlash? I'm starting to think they're the same thing. Fashion drove a certain segment of society to embrace bottled water in the first place, and fashion (green chic, that is) may drive that same segment to reject it. But the imperative to stop global warming—the biggest reason for the backlash—reaches only so far. For some, the imperative to protect oneself from tap water that either tastes bad or is bad, or the simple allure of convenience, may trump planetary concerns.

The International Bottled Water Association (IBWA), which represents 162 bottlers in the United States, is counting on it. Now in panic mode, the group is deflecting critics left and right. Bottled water uses only 0.02 percent of the world's groundwater, Joseph Doss, the group's president, argues in advertisements and interviews. (Yes, but it takes all those gallons from just a few places.) Other beverages move around the country, and the world, too: it's unfair to single out bottled water for opprobrium. (True: only about 10 percent of bottled water, by volume, is imported in the United States, compared with 25 to 30 percent of wine. But we don't drink 28 gallons of wine per person per year, and wine doesn't, alas, flow from our taps.)

Another industry argument is that bottled water is a healthy alternative to high-calorie drinks. The IBWA says it competes with soda, not tap water. But this appears to be a change in stance. In 2000, Robert S. Morrison, then CEO of Quaker Oats, soon to merge with PepsiCo, distributors of Aquafina, told a reporter, "The biggest enemy is tap water." And Susan D. Wellington, vice president of marketing for Gatorade, also owned by PepsiCo, said to a group of New York analysts, "When we're done, tap water will be relegated to showers and washing dishes." In 2006, Fiji Water took that dig at Cleveland, with its "The Label Says Fiji Because It's Not Bottled in Cleveland" ad.

Since Americans still drink almost twice as much soda as bottled water, it's not surprising that Coca- Cola, owner of vitaminwater and Dasani, and PepsiCo. are covering all their bases. The companies now offer vitamin-fortified sodas, extending what Michael Pollan calls "the Wonder bread strategy of supplementation to junk food in its purest form."

The bottling industry also plays the emergency card: consumers should consider bottled water when tap isn't an option. When the pipes break and pumps fail, of course, but also when you are, well, thirsty. "It's not so easy, walking down Third Avenue on a hot day, to get a glass of tap water," John D. Sicher Jr., editor and publisher of Beverage Digest, a trade publication, says. And, yes, all those plastic bottles, which use about 40 percent less resin now than they did five years ago, really should be recycled, the bottlers all cry. "Our vision is to no longer have our packaging viewed as waste but as a resource for future use," says Scott Vitters, Coke's director of sustainable packaging, says. At the same time, bottlers tend to oppose container-deposit laws, which are funded by the beverage industry, in favor of curbside or drop- off recycling programs, which have, so far, been funded by taxpayers.

Are environmental activists making too much of bottled water's externalities? Surely other redundant, status-oriented consumer products—the latest iteration of an iPod, for example—are worse for the environment, and for those affected by their manufacture (though nobody buys an iPod a day). Michael Mascha, who publishes a bottled-water newsletter, is adamant on the topic: "All I want is to have a choice about what I drink. I want five or six waters to match a dining experience. Fine waters are a treat." Mascha can't help marginalizing the opposition. "The backlash is the green movement," he says, "and it's antiglobalization. They say water shouldn't be a commodity, but why should water be free? Why is it different from food, which we also need to live, or shelter?"

The antiglobalization argument comes from pressure groups such as Food and Water Watch, which runs a "take back the tap" pledge campaign, and Corporate Accountability International (CAI). They have ideological roots in single-issue social and environmental campaigns (curbing sweatshop abuses and old-growth logging, for example). In recent years, such campaigns have converged to challenge the political power of large multinational corporations that, often by exercising free-trade agreements, are presumed to harm the environment and infringe upon human rights, local democracies and cultural diversity.

In the United States, CAI's anti-bottled water campaign—which taps both the environmental and the antiprivatization movements—has a multi-tiered agenda. First, it wants to demonstrate that most people can't discern between bottled and tap water. Second, it informs the public that most bottled water is "just tap" (which isn't, strictly speaking, true). Volunteers also make their points about bottled water's carbon footprint and its expense compared to tap, and then they ask individuals, and local governments, to quit buying it. Depending on the city, CAI may also ask local officials to forswear selling public water to private bottlers.

The group also pushes for water bottlers in the United States to quit undermining local control of water sources with their pumping and bottling. This last bit—opposing the privatization of a public resource—may be too outré for most mainstream news outlets to pick up on, perhaps because it raises sticky questions of ownership and control, and it offends many Americans' ideas about the primacy of capitalism. But while Corporate Accountability's mission to halt corporate control of a common resource might be abstract to most bottled-water drinkers, it isn't the least bit abstract to Californians resisting Nestlé's efforts to build a bottling plant in McCloud, near Mount Shasta, or to Floridians who swam in Crystal Springs until Nestlé began bottling it, or to those residents of Fryeburg, Maine, raging against Nestlé's boreholes and the big silver Poland Spring trucks that haul local water to markets throughout the northeast.

The fate of a spring-fed pond in Maine might not interest the average person slapping down two bucks for a bottle of Poland Spring at a concession stand, but the issue of who controls water may in the long run be even more important than how many barrels of oil are burned to quench the nation's thirst. We can do without oil, but we can't live without water.

Adapted from Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It. Copyright Elizabeth Royte. Published by Bloomsbury.


In the spring of 2007, the quietly simmering backlash against bottled water began to boil. Responding to well-organized pressure groups, first one, and then a dozen cities across the nation canceled their contracts for bottled-water delivery. Upscale restaurants struck fancy waters from their menus, and college students conducted taste tests intended to prove, once and for all, that most people can't tell the difference between bottled water and tap.

Suddenly bottled water was big news. Every time I opened a newspaper, magazine or Web browser, there was another story announcing that this harmless indulgence is anything but. On the lookout for this sort of material, I nearly drowned in the tidal wave of eco-criticism. With a mounting sense of anticipation—how far will the attacks go?—I watched as reporters, using statistics from academics and environmental groups, blasted away at the bottled-water industry. But curiously, their focus wasn't water, at first. It was oil.

Specifically, the 17 million barrels it takes each year to make water bottles for the U.S. market. (Plastic-making also generates emissions of nickel, ethylbenzene, ethylene oxide, and benzene, but because we're in the thick of the global-warming movement, not the environmental-carcinogen movement, this doesn't get much play.) That's enough oil to fuel 1.3 million cars for a year.

Is 17 million barrels a lot? Yes and no. Total U.S. oil consumption is 20 million barrels a day. But the oil that goes into water bottles themselves doesn't include the energy needed to fill them or to move them to consumers. Every week, a billion bottles snake through the country on tens of thousands of trucks, trains and ships. (In 2007, Poland Spring alone burned 928,226 gallons of diesel fuel.) And then there's the energy it takes to chill water in fridges and to haul the empties off to landfills. It adds up.

Peter Gleick, president of the Pacific Institute, estimates that the total energy required for every bottle's production, transport and disposal is equivalent, on average, to filling that bottle a quarter of the way with oil. His finding, undisputed by the water-bottling industry, shocks me. Oil, as we know, is a nonrenewable resource, mostly imported. The hunt for more oil is politically dangerous and expensive, and can be environmentally ruinous.

And then there's the water itself—increasingly important as we enter what's been called the post-Peak Water era. Manufacturing and filling plastic water bottles consumes twice as much water as the bottle will ultimately contain, in part because bottle-making machines are cooled by water. Plants that use reverse osmosis to purify tap water lose between three and nine gallons of water—depending on how new the filters are and what they remove—for every filtered gallon that ends up on the shelf. Cleaning a bottling plant also requires a great deal of municipal water, especially if the end product is flavored. On average, only 60 to 70 percent of the water used by bottling plants ends up on supermarket shelves: the rest is waste.

These costs—water, energy, oil—aren't unique to bottled water. It takes 48 gallons of water to make a gallon of beer, four gallons of water to make one of soda. Even a cow has a water footprint, drinking four gallons of water to produce one gallon of milk. But those other beverages aren't redundant to the calorie-free (and caffeine- and coloring-free) liquid that comes out of the tap, and that's an important distinction.

As 2007 wound down, bottled water sales slowed a bit, but it's hard to say if it was due to activist pressure, cool weather, high prices (oil costs more) or, as Nestlé Waters North America CEO Kim Jeffery says, a lack of natural disasters, which always spur demand. In any event, billions of cases of water continued to march out of supermarkets, and millions of bottles dribbled from everyplace else.

"People don't go backwards," says Arthur Von Wiesenberger, author of The Pocket Guide to Bottled Water and a consultant to the beverage industry. "Once they've developed a taste for bottled water, they won't give it up." Indeed, new bottling plants opened this past year in the United States, Europe, India and Canada; and entrepreneurs announced plans to bottle water in the Amazon, among other fragile landscapes, while Nestlé—the Swiss conglomerate that owns Poland Spring, Calistoga and many other U.S. brands of spring water, not to mention the French Perrier—continues to buy and explore new spring sites.

Overall, Americans drank 29.3 gallons of bottled water per capita in 2007, up from 27.6 gallons in 2006, with the 2007 wholesale revenue for bottled water in the U.S. exceeding $11.7 billion.

Still, among a certain psychographic, bottled water, not so long ago a chic accessory, is now the mark of the devil, the moral equivalent of driving a Hummer. No longer socially useful, it's shunned in many restaurants, where ordering tap is all the rage. Writing in Slate, Daniel Gross calls this new snob appeal entirely predictable. "So long as only a few people were drinking Evian, Perrier, and San Pellegrino, bottled water wasn't perceived as a societal ill. Now that everybody is toting bottles of Poland Spring, Aquafina, and Dasani, it's a big problem."

But is it fashion or is it rising awareness of the bottle's environmental toll that's driving the backlash? I'm starting to think they're the same thing. Fashion drove a certain segment of society to embrace bottled water in the first place, and fashion (green chic, that is) may drive that same segment to reject it. But the imperative to stop global warming—the biggest reason for the backlash—reaches only so far. For some, the imperative to protect oneself from tap water that either tastes bad or is bad, or the simple allure of convenience, may trump planetary concerns.

The International Bottled Water Association (IBWA), which represents 162 bottlers in the United States, is counting on it. Now in panic mode, the group is deflecting critics left and right. Bottled water uses only 0.02 percent of the world's groundwater, Joseph Doss, the group's president, argues in advertisements and interviews. (Yes, but it takes all those gallons from just a few places.) Other beverages move around the country, and the world, too: it's unfair to single out bottled water for opprobrium. (True: only about 10 percent of bottled water, by volume, is imported in the United States, compared with 25 to 30 percent of wine. But we don't drink 28 gallons of wine per person per year, and wine doesn't, alas, flow from our taps.)

Another industry argument is that bottled water is a healthy alternative to high-calorie drinks. The IBWA says it competes with soda, not tap water. But this appears to be a change in stance. In 2000, Robert S. Morrison, then CEO of Quaker Oats, soon to merge with PepsiCo, distributors of Aquafina, told a reporter, "The biggest enemy is tap water." And Susan D. Wellington, vice president of marketing for Gatorade, also owned by PepsiCo, said to a group of New York analysts, "When we're done, tap water will be relegated to showers and washing dishes." In 2006, Fiji Water took that dig at Cleveland, with its "The Label Says Fiji Because It's Not Bottled in Cleveland" ad.

Since Americans still drink almost twice as much soda as bottled water, it's not surprising that Coca- Cola, owner of vitaminwater and Dasani, and PepsiCo. are covering all their bases. The companies now offer vitamin-fortified sodas, extending what Michael Pollan calls "the Wonder bread strategy of supplementation to junk food in its purest form."

The bottling industry also plays the emergency card: consumers should consider bottled water when tap isn't an option. When the pipes break and pumps fail, of course, but also when you are, well, thirsty. "It's not so easy, walking down Third Avenue on a hot day, to get a glass of tap water," John D. Sicher Jr., editor and publisher of Beverage Digest, a trade publication, says. And, yes, all those plastic bottles, which use about 40 percent less resin now than they did five years ago, really should be recycled, the bottlers all cry. "Our vision is to no longer have our packaging viewed as waste but as a resource for future use," says Scott Vitters, Coke's director of sustainable packaging, says. At the same time, bottlers tend to oppose container-deposit laws, which are funded by the beverage industry, in favor of curbside or drop- off recycling programs, which have, so far, been funded by taxpayers.

Are environmental activists making too much of bottled water's externalities? Surely other redundant, status-oriented consumer products—the latest iteration of an iPod, for example—are worse for the environment, and for those affected by their manufacture (though nobody buys an iPod a day). Michael Mascha, who publishes a bottled-water newsletter, is adamant on the topic: "All I want is to have a choice about what I drink. I want five or six waters to match a dining experience. Fine waters are a treat." Mascha can't help marginalizing the opposition. "The backlash is the green movement," he says, "and it's antiglobalization. They say water shouldn't be a commodity, but why should water be free? Why is it different from food, which we also need to live, or shelter?"

The antiglobalization argument comes from pressure groups such as Food and Water Watch, which runs a "take back the tap" pledge campaign, and Corporate Accountability International (CAI). They have ideological roots in single-issue social and environmental campaigns (curbing sweatshop abuses and old-growth logging, for example). In recent years, such campaigns have converged to challenge the political power of large multinational corporations that, often by exercising free-trade agreements, are presumed to harm the environment and infringe upon human rights, local democracies and cultural diversity.

In the United States, CAI's anti-bottled water campaign—which taps both the environmental and the antiprivatization movements—has a multi-tiered agenda. First, it wants to demonstrate that most people can't discern between bottled and tap water. Second, it informs the public that most bottled water is "just tap" (which isn't, strictly speaking, true). Volunteers also make their points about bottled water's carbon footprint and its expense compared to tap, and then they ask individuals, and local governments, to quit buying it. Depending on the city, CAI may also ask local officials to forswear selling public water to private bottlers.

The group also pushes for water bottlers in the United States to quit undermining local control of water sources with their pumping and bottling. This last bit—opposing the privatization of a public resource—may be too outré for most mainstream news outlets to pick up on, perhaps because it raises sticky questions of ownership and control, and it offends many Americans' ideas about the primacy of capitalism. But while Corporate Accountability's mission to halt corporate control of a common resource might be abstract to most bottled-water drinkers, it isn't the least bit abstract to Californians resisting Nestlé's efforts to build a bottling plant in McCloud, near Mount Shasta, or to Floridians who swam in Crystal Springs until Nestlé began bottling it, or to those residents of Fryeburg, Maine, raging against Nestlé's boreholes and the big silver Poland Spring trucks that haul local water to markets throughout the northeast.

The fate of a spring-fed pond in Maine might not interest the average person slapping down two bucks for a bottle of Poland Spring at a concession stand, but the issue of who controls water may in the long run be even more important than how many barrels of oil are burned to quench the nation's thirst. We can do without oil, but we can't live without water.

Adapted from Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It. Copyright Elizabeth Royte. Published by Bloomsbury.

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Comments (21)

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Many good comments about our relationship to water. I have sat in many meetings about the subject of bottled water over the past few years. I am opposed to reusing any plastic bottle and want the tops removed before they are recycled or disposed of to let the atmosphere escape because it contains water. People are begining to understand the sacred relationship to water and I am pleased to see this happen. There is only so much water for us to use and we should have never allowed it to be sold but that practice goes back a long time. Everyone keep up the good work and reeducate the world that water is sacred.

Posted by Scott Frazier on November 19,2010 | 12:51 PM

Learn about how FLUORIDE can affect HEALTH at the National Academy of Sciences (bookstore) web site TO READ THE NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL'S COMPENDIUM ON WATER FLUORIDATION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES

www.nap.edu, put "water fluoridation" in the search box

You could start with the chapter on the endocrine system, and read about how fluoride impairs the thyroid.

The ADA seems to be protecting its decades old position and is not keeping up with science. They are staffed to get the water fluoridation message across, and succeed, but simply can not be trusted on this important matter.

Posted by Annabelle on August 7,2010 | 10:28 AM

We have found that using a Reverse Osmosis system give us plenty of very clean water without using bottled water of any kind. We found the info
www.bottledwateralternative.com.

Posted by g kvi on November 14,2009 | 01:39 PM

Does it matter if it is bottled water or any other product with similar attributes? All products are not perfectly "green" and they all come with a cost. So why delude ourselves with the good feeling of "yes I am so green and politically correct...Look at me” when the very existence of a single consuming human impacts the surrounding environment in a negative way? With that said, I should state that I am not against the existence of mankind (oops a politically incorrect term) just doom sayers and wags that create just as many problem as they pretend to solve.

*Elizabeth Royte responds (5/15/2008)*
Yes, everything we do has an impact -- biking to work, recycling newspapers, and drinking tap water included. But since we depend on the (finite) natural world for all that sustains us, aren't we obliged to harm that world as little as possible? (And yes, we may each define "possible" according to our own conscience and abilities.) If your tap water is healthful, why opt for a product that's redundant and, however minor in the scheme of things, takes an unnecessary environmental toll?

Posted by Matthew Combes on May 12,2008 | 03:13 PM

since I live in Mexico I do not have the tap water option, however, it does concern me the incredible number of bottles disposed per year. Personally I boil and refill which is probably as bad for the environment. So many in this country do not have a secure water source, bottled water is their only option. Perhaps we need to look at the source, why do people think that bottled water, uncarbonated,is better than tap. Mebbe we need to go back to the returnable glass bottles... susan+

Posted by susan dennen on May 8,2008 | 03:27 PM

I think it's great that I and others have made a commitment to reduce the number of plastic bottles that we will consume. But I wonder about other people -- where will I get the confidence to tell others about the extreme waste involved in the bottled water production?

Posted by Gregg Punswick on May 5,2008 | 10:13 AM

Has anyone thought about how much water is taken out of our invironment, by what's left in the bottle with the lid on? I work as a custodian in a midsize high school and I take the lids off hundreds of these bottles every week. Most of them only have one swallow out of them! I worked at a landfill for 10 years, and the trash is so spongey that when a compactor runs over a bottle of water, it just sinks into the trash, it doesn't break, thus releasing the water back into our invironment! How long does it take a plastic bottle to decompose with no oxygen getting to it? I think it's safe to say that millons of gallons of water are taken out of our invironment every month? Is water going to be our next problem, it seems to be heading that way. As for the oil I think the high prices is what's going to force us to start using alternative fuels. If it stayed cheap noone would be trying as hard to push for cleaner fuels, and we would continue to destroy our planet! Think about this the next time you throw away a half full water bottle, with the cap on it!

Posted by T Wiedmaier on April 30,2008 | 01:44 AM

The figures on what it takes to make all those plastic bottles brought me up short. Astronomical! So going forward I will avoid those bottles......One of he earliest posts mentioned wanting a small glass bottle to fit in a purse. May I suggest, as you grocery shop, to look for something already bottled in the right size glass bottle - buy it and empty it. Or Visit your local pharmacy......lots of stuff in the drugstore come in glass. I'm sure if we boycott water bottled in plastic......someone will come along and make just the right glass bottle, just as they came out with seemingly safer plastics. It's clear all the progress we make isn't all progress. We need to discern going forward what's progress, or what's convenient, yet unhealthy and unsafe. For years pop came in returnable glass bottles with a return deposit. Many of us saved glass jars from things like mayo and applesauce to store rice and beans.....and for those not so thrifty there were the big granny jars with the rubber gasket seals to store flour and sugar in. Looks like progress needs to go in reverse.

Posted by J. Soldwisch on April 25,2008 | 09:32 PM

I was born in France, a mere 5 miles away from Evian’s bottling plant. I think ferrying bottle water from France to North America or Asia is insane! Isn’t it today’s version of “bringing coal to Newcastle.” I don’t see any mention in the article of the cost of moving that ponderous commodity from Fiji, France, or Italy into the United States. In my opinion, snobbery is the driver and vain consumers of fancy bottled water brands should be flogged for keeping up the demand!

Posted by Jean-François Lanvers on April 24,2008 | 06:56 PM

I rent my house. In the small community I live in (near the great lakes) there have been several water advisories from our municipal water treatment plant. The notices go to the landlord, who may, or may not remember to let me know. I have some health problems which make me succeptible to some of the water issues. Until municipalities do a better job with our tap water, I'll choose bottled. I WOULD like to be clearer on types of portable containers I can (re)use for said bottled water.

*Elizabeth Royte responds (5/6/2008)*
Deb, are the problems with your water something you could deal with by boiling? It’s a hassle, but it’s cheaper and has a far smaller carbon footprint than buying in bottles. Ask your doctor about filtering with granulated activated charcoal or a reverse osmosis unit, which you install under your sink. If you absolutely must buy bottled water, try to choose the largest size container from the closest source. The best bottles for carrying water around are glass, stainless steel (lined with food-grade enamel), and metal.

Posted by Deb on April 24,2008 | 12:07 PM

Machines that pump cold clean air into our homes are readily available, are very successful commercially, and have been in daily use in the U,S, and worldwide for many years. They are called air conditioners equipped with electrostatic precipitators, mechanical filters, and activated charcoal carbon filters to absorb volatile organic compounds and possibly sulfur dioxide. If it is true that there are no differences between tap water and bottled water, would someone kindly advise me where the tap is that freely flows Pellagrino water and the famous sulfur water of Saratoga Springs and other world famous mineral waters that are bottled and sold at retail. It is my understanding that bottled water at a minimum is rendered sterile by either a heat process, a radiation process, or a ultra membrane filtration process such as reverse osmosis. I don't believe that sterilized tap water is available anywhere in this country--except possibly by a random accident of nature such as municipal supplies sources froman artesian well and distributed without coming into contact with the environment. In our area, we are frequently warned of the presence of E. coli and the potential presence of single cell parasites in our drinking water. I have never heard of a recall of bottled water for presence of live organismic material capable of growth and reproduction. Can someone provide a reference to such a recall for bottled water? One poster reports that she lived in a "3rd World" country where drinking water was a neccessity! Is not drinking water a necessity for human and animal life regardless of what country or type of country in which one lives?

Posted by Ken on April 23,2008 | 06:28 PM

I bought bottled water in South America, southeaset Asia, and, Africa.

Posted by Jim Brandon on April 23,2008 | 05:55 PM

The one thing that your article failed to mention is that tap water is better for you, especially children. Tap water contains fluoride, bottled water does not. Tap water must comply with EPA regulations, which bottled water does not.

*Elizabeth Royte responds (5/6/2008)*
Yes, most Americans live in communities with fluoridated water, but many do not. The American Dental Association wants us to have fluoride, unless we’re less than two years old, but it acknowledges we can get the fluoride from toothpaste, mouth rinses, and annual fluoride treatment. A few water bottlers have started adding fluoride to their offerings. The International Bottled Water Association lists some of those companies here.
http://www.bottledwater.org/public/fluorida.htm

Posted by Steve Slepner on April 23,2008 | 01:57 PM

In parts of Central America, plastic water bottles are used to clean up community litter. Empty bottles from hotels and restaurants are provided children who then collect up litter which they stuff into the bottles and return them to community centers in return for educational materials such as pens, pencils, books and paper. The stuffed bottles (called plastic bricks) are used to build needed schools, clinics and other structures in impoverished communities. Clean water, community clean up - environmental education and needed public buildings: What's the problem? You can see a clearer explanation of uses in Guatemala at www.puravidaatitlan.org.

Posted by Earl de Bewrge on April 23,2008 | 12:13 PM

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