Deanna Harms

Bottled Water’s All Wet

by Deanna Harms on May 14, 2009 · 3 comments

Posted in Conservation

We’re midstream into our annual Wichita River Festival, which has us thinking not just about the health and well-being of the river that flows through our downtown – but also about all the bottled water consumed by its side.

If you haven’t kicked the bottled-water habit, we hope you’ll consider drinking filtered tap water instead. Concerned about portability? Get yourself one of the great stainless-steel bottles now on the market. Then don’t leave home without it.

Bad for your bod

  • Toxic chemicals can leach out from the plastic bottle from the heat while stored in the warehouse, during transportation in the truck or your car, or sitting in the sun poolside.

A price too great to pay

  • Worldwide, we spend $100 billion on bottled water every year. It would cost way less to provide every person with safe, sanitary drinking water. It would also save us the roughly 17 million barrels of oil needed to produce those plastic bottles. That’s enough to fuel 100,000 cars for a full year. By the way, the cost of gas averages about 2 cents an ounce. The cost of bottled water: 5 cents an ounce.

Trashing our environment

  • Production, packaging, transportation and disposal all contribute to the problem. We add 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere just in the manufacture of all those plastic bottles. And when we’ve drunk them dry – they end up as garbage – laying by the road, filling up landfills, floating in rivers. Oh, and creating a circulating trash patch in the Pacific that’s twice the size of Texas.

No better for you

  • The vast majority of bottled water doesn’t cross state lines, which makes it exempt from FDA oversight. The EPA, however, keeps a watchful eye on municipal water. Drinking water straight out of the tap is probably just as safe as the stuff you buy in a bottle. Looks like this emperor has no clothes.

Want to learn more? Check out the Sierra Club’s bottled water campaign.

What do you plan to do with the $400 you can save a year by not buying bottled water?

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Jen Gore May 15, 2009 at 7:43 am

I would use the extra $400 to buy cigarettes.

Nah, I would probably use it to shop at the health food store. I love shopping organic, but it can be so expensive!

Sue Ann May 15, 2009 at 12:13 pm

I use that money to take short vacations in Kansas, driving just the dirt roads.
My husband and I chose to purchase drinking containers to take where ever we go rather than buy bottled water. We purchase fruit, cut it up, mix it with a jug of water and we’re good to go. The combination tastes better than any water out of a bottle.

Eric May 15, 2009 at 3:45 pm

My wife and I recently kicked the habit. The trouble is that bottled water is just so convenient. So what we did was keep all of the old bottles, wash them, and just refill them with filtered tap water and refrigerate them. Now we can have bottled water without the expense or damage to the environment.

Leave a Comment

WordPress Admin