TAKE A SIP OF REAL WATER.

it's not worth it supporting these evil corporations

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

bottles are great?

think.

CANADA: Water - Bottles Versus Faucets


CANADA: Water - Bottles Versus Faucets

by Stephen LeahyIPS
March 12th, 2005

Four large corporations control much of the world's booming bottled water industry and pose a threat to public water utilities, according to a report by the Canadian non-governmental Polaris Institute.

The business moves 50 billion dollars a year, and Nestlé, PepsiCo, Coca-Cola and Danone companies control the lion's share of the water market, according to the study ''Inside the Bottle''.

''These companies harvest huge profits from water they either obtain for free or at very low cost from public taps,'' Tony Clarke, the author of the book-length report, told Tierramérica.

Up to 20 percent of the U.S. population and 17.5 percent of Canadians now get their drinking water exclusively from bottled sources, Clarke said. According to industry statistics, worldwide sales increased 40 percent between 2000 and 2003, when annual per capita consumption of bottled water averaged 90 litres in the United States and 51 litres in Latin America.

"Bottled water companies' marketing plays on fears about the health and safety of public tap water," said Clarke, though he admitted that there are numerous instances of illness and even deaths from drinking bad tap water, but none directly linked to bottled water.

However, last year 500,000 litres of Coca-Cola's Dasani brand water had to be recalled in the British market because of high levels of bromate, a cancer-causing chemical, Clarke said. The Dasani water is tap water that is filtered and treated.

"Similar types of contamination could be happening elsewhere, but no one is testing the water often enough," he added.

Bottled water is regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, says Stephen Kay, spokesman for the International Bottled Water Association. Inspections are conducted by local health authorities, and independent annual inspections are made in each member country.

"We're not trying to discourage consumers from using tap water. People prefer bottled water for it's convenience, safety and health benefits,'' Kay told Tierramérica.
Furthermore, bottled water offers a healthier choice than sugar-rich soft drinks, "which could help Latin America's obesity problem," he said.

If any industry should be nervous about the rapid growth of the bottled water industry, it's soft drink manufacturers, he says.

But Coca-Cola and Pepsi aren't particularly worried, says the Polaris Institute's Clarke, since they have become dominant players in the industry. Coca-Cola has publicly declared that bottled water will be its biggest selling product in a few years.

The France-based Danone, meanwhile, produces the bottled water brands Evian, Volvic, Aqua, and Crystal Springs.

Catherine O'Brien, spokeswoman for Nestlé Canada, said no company officials were available to speak on this issue prior to publication of this issue of Tierramérica. Coca-Cola and PepsiCo did not return calls.

The real worry amongst water rights activists is a cultural shift towards water being seen as a commodity that people should pay a lot of money for, Clarke says.

"There is enormous corporate interest in selling water... Bottled water plays a leading role in conditioning people for the privatisation of public water utilities."

Public opposition to privatisation in North America is strong, following some well-publicised problems with privatisation attempts, says Wenonah Hauter, director of the 'Water for All' campaign of Public Citizen, a U.S. NGO.

Less than 15 percent of water utilities are in private hands in the United States, and the ones that are mainly provide sewage treatment, not drinking water, Hauter said in a Tierramérica interview.

Hauter believes the bottled water sector is also hurting public water utilities because it diverts funds and attention away from improving public water services. "Instead of insisting on healthier tap water, people waste their money buying bottled water," she said.

If there are legitimate concerns about local water, a home water filter is a much cheaper and less wasteful solution, Hauter added.

The tens of billions of bottled water containers manufactured every year have created a huge plastic waste problem. Although recyclable, only a fraction go through that process in the United states. The bulk ends up in landfills.

"We hide our bottle waste in landfills, but in the developing world those bottles are everywhere, including littering the landscape and the ocean," Hauter said. The industry invests huge amounts of money to oppose any deposit system where people would get money for returning their plastic bottles, she added.

But FDA spokesman Kay said "deposit systems are expensive to operate and burden the retailer with having to store all those empty bottles," while curbside recycling programmes are better and easier for consumers.

As for places and countries that do not have such programmes, it is their "duty" to "embrace recycling for the environmental benefit and to feed the demand for recyclable material," he said.

"I feel that these groups that care about health and the environment should be embracing the bottled water industry for what we do to deliver safe, quality water with environmental stewardship at the top of our list," Kay concluded.

(*Originally published Mar. 5 by Latin American newspapers that are part of the Tierramérica network. Tierramérica is a specialised news service produced by IPS with the backing of the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Environment Programme.)






http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=11957

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

IF YOU LIKE THIS STOP BUYING WATER BOTTLES!!!

Stainless Steel

Would it be smart not to sell plastic water bottles at all? How cool would it be if the only way you could buy water is if it was sold in a stainless steel bottle. You buy your bottle at the store and fill it there as well. If  on every corner there was a filling station. At these stations you can fill your bottle with fresh cold water from stainless steel pipes. At the station there would be 5 pumps where you can fill up, you could also adjust the temperature to what you want the water to be. Each bottle would be the same size and shape. This would be expansive to start up but it would make a difference. It would cut down on pollution and would use water more effectively. 

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

how smart is it?

just on my way to school i was thinking about the dilemma with these water bottle corporations. their business plans must be the stupidest things in the world. this is a slight over view.

1- they depend on the townships to pump water from the local lakes
2- they take the water from the small local plants
3-they drive it to their factory bottle it
4- they sell it to the public
5- the public does  not recycle it properly
6- it ends up back in the water that they pump out of.

what boggles my mind is they dont do anything to help the local environment where they pump from. these people are takes mass amounts of water every hour. they basically pump until the lake is dry. once the lake is dry they leave and find a new one.

this is nuts. it is a stupid plan on their part because they will run out and be left with nothing other then a environmental problem. for their business to get any respect they need to give back. they have basically one expense, the bottles. they are making a massive profit on us by selling the water back to us. they need to rehabilitate the areas that they have destroyed. all these people do are create problems with our environment and make lots of money from us for no reason. they have a great scam going but thats it and it only betters their fat wallets as it is now.    

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

BOTTLES

with not supporting the water bottle companies you are helping fight the fight. using a personal water bottle is better for you and whats around you. when you are looking for a bottle at the store look for BPA free bottles. the best bet and new trendy thing to is buy a canteen. the stainless steel is a clean fresh look and is durable.

DON'T BUY A NALGENE WATER BOTTEL UNTILL YOU READ THIS!





UPDATE:Nalgene no longer sells water bottles made with Bisphenol A. Number 7 as a plastic type means any plastic that is not in the first six, so having number 7 on the bottom does not necessarily mean that it contains BPA.

Dangers of Nalgene water bottles and other plastic sport water bottles
Many Nalgene water bottles and other hard plastic sport water bottles are made of polycarbonate (#7 on the bottom) , which may leach Bisphenol A, an estrogen-like chemical. Canada is considering a ban of products containing Bisphenol A (BPA) and a new American study links it to breast cancer and early puberty, and is particularly concerned about the effect on babies. Others have raised concerns about the effect of feminizing hormones on men, such as breast enlargement or dropping semen counts. At the same time, sport water bottles are ubiquitous and we don't want people going back to buying bottled water. What should you do? Time to nix the Nalgene? We looked at our past posts and the latest reports, and suggest the following.
7 Ways to beat BPA, in order of Importance:
1. Ditch the clear plastic baby bottles, right now. All the research that says there are problems point at the effect of the estrogen-like BPA on children as being the most significant.
2. Tin cans are often lined in plastic BPA and sit around a long time; get rid of older tin cans, particularly if they contain tomatoes and other acidic fruits.
3. Don't use your polycarbonate bottle for hot drinks. 
4. Polycarbonate bottles get crazed and cracked as they get older; that increases surface area. Get rid of old ones.
5. Replace your Polycarbonate bottle with a SiggKleen Kanteen, or the new BPA freeCamelbak, particularly if pregnant or pre-pubescent.
6. Replace jugs where water sits around a long time, like Brita knockoffs. (Brita says they are BPA free)
7. Stop using jugged water cooler water, get a filter and cooler that uses city water. It is a big jug so there probably isn't much of a problem, but why are you drinking bottled water anyways?
Don't worry about polycarbonates in non-food related products like CDs and DVDs. but keep them out of babies' mouths.
The Bisphenol A Controversy
This list is based on a bit of consultation with our resident chemist, but the issue is controversial. The plastics industry says there is no problem, as does the maker ofNalgene water bottles.
Energy and Commerce Chair John Dingell says “There are serious health concerns about whether Bisphenol A is safe, not only for adults, but for children and infants," and is concerned that the Food and Drug Administration's policies on BPA are "entirely dependent on two studies' that are both funded by a subsidiary of the American Chemistry Council, which represents plastic resins manufacturers."
According to Chemistry World, The FDA maintains that there is no reason to ban or restrict the use of BPA in food or drink containers because human exposure levels to the chemical from these sources is too low to have any adverse effects.
See also: BPA Danger may be greater from Tin Cans than Water Bottles



http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/04/bpa-in-water.php

Thursday, April 21, 2011

THE ONLY GOOD THINGS WATER BOTTLES ARE GOOD FOR

THE SCAM

companies are going straight to your local water filtration plants and filling up water trucks for FREE. once they have it in the trucks they take it to their plant and bottle them. once the water is bottled they put it on trucks ship it all over North America and sell it back to you for 100000x the cost it takes them to make it.

people buy these water bottles! this is an outrage that people are buying what comes out of the tap. i ask the question WHY? your paying for something that you basically get for FREE. yes sure bottled water is somewhat convenient however how hard is it to bring a water bottle from home. not only are you saving money but the ENVIRONMENT. do you think its right that your paying this amount of money for your convenience? do you think its right to buy these petroleum based water bottles and drinking with them and then having them end up somewhere in the water or in some animals habitat?


ASK YOURSELF ?

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

THIS IS WHATS GOING ON!

this blog is all about how bad the water bottle industry is. it effects many people and many things that are involved in your everyday life, and you may have know idea that it is effecting you. the environment is what keeps us alive, without it we have nothing and will become nothing. the water bottle companies just take this water for free and sell it back to us for 10000 times more to us. not only is the water not safe for us it has chemicals in it that are not healthy. next time you think about buying a bottle of water. THINK ABOUT IT

THINK ABOUT IT!

DOES THIS LOOK RIGHT?