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-   -   Tap water is making a comeback (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=97167)

DaemonSeid 06-18-2008 10:03 AM

Tap water is making a comeback
 
With a day's worth of bottled water -- the recommended 64 ounces -- costing hundreds to thousands of dollars a year depending on the brand, more people are opting to slurp water that comes straight from the sink.

The lousy economy may be accomplishing what environmentalists have been trying to do for years -- wean people off the disposable plastic bottles of water that were sold as stylish, portable, healthier and safer than water from the tap.

Heather Kennedy, 33, an office administrator from Austin, Texas, said she used to drink a lot of bottled water but now tries to drink exclusively tap water.

"I feel that (bottled water) is a rip-off," she said in an e-mail. "It is not a better or healthier product than the water that comes out of my tap. It is absurd to pay so much extra for it."

http://www.cnn.com/2008/BUSINESS/06/...ion=cnn_latest

Measured in 700-milliliter bottles of Poland Spring, a daily intake of water would cost $4.41, based on prices at a CVS drugstore in New York. Or $6.36 in 20-ounce bottles of Dasani. By half-liters of Evian, that'll be $6.76, please. Which adds up to thousands a year.

Even a 24-pack of half-liter bottles at Costco Wholesale Corp., a bargain at $6.97, would be consumed by one person in six days. That's more than $400 a year.

But water from the tap? A little less than 0.14 cent for a day's worth of water, based on averages from an American Water Works Association survey -- just about 51 cents a year.

U.S. consumers spent $16.8 billion on bottled water in 2007, according to the trade publication Beverage Digest. That's up 12 percent from the year before -- but it's the slowest growth rate since the early 1990s, said editor John Sicher.

Coca-Cola Enterprises Inc., the biggest bottler of Coca-Cola Co.'s Dasani, recently cut its outlook for the quarter, saying the weak North American economy is hurting sales of bottled water and soda -- especially the 20-ounce single serving sizes consumers had been buying at gas stations.

"They're not walking in and spending a dollar plus for a 20-ounce bottle of water," said beverage analyst William Pecoriello at Morgan Stanley. Flavored and "enhanced" waters like vitamin drinks are also eating into plain bottled water's market share.

Pecoriello said Americans' concern about the environment was also a factor, driven by campaigns against the use of oil in making and transporting the bottles, the waste they create and the notion of paying for what is essentially free.

The Tappening Project, which promotes tap water in the U.S. as clean, safe and more eco-friendly than bottled water, launched a new ad campaign in May. The company has also sold more than 200,000 reusable hard plastic and stainless steel bottles since last November.

Linda Schiffman, 56, a recent retiree from Lexington, Mass., bought two metal bottles at $14.50 each for herself and her daughter from Corporate Accountability, a consumer advocate group, after she swore off buying cases of bottled water from Costco.

33girl 06-18-2008 10:17 AM

Dad 33 is SO happy every time he sees a story like this. He's been bitching about the whole bottled water concept for years.

I have a Brita at home & a water cooler at work, so the only time I ever drink bottled water is if I'm on the road or at a street fair or something.

DSTCHAOS 06-18-2008 10:50 AM

No tap water for me.

As for water bottles, I drink a gallon of water a day so bottled waters would be costly and inconvenient for me.

I buy 7 gallons of Deer Park every week (the gallons and not the bottles) and fill my reusable 1/2 gallon water jug with it. I fill this jug about twice a day.

Water is my only beverage and I love it. Plus, I exercise a lot so it is a big part of my life. :)

RU OX Alum 06-18-2008 11:24 AM

I use a filter. It's cheap. No way am I drinking this city's water. I think it comes right from the canal to my loft.

nittanyalum 06-18-2008 11:33 AM

We are all tap water, all the time (of course, our local tap water is suitable for drinking, I realize there are parts of the country this isn't true). If we buy bottles, it's only if we're out of the house and it's the only option or if we're camping or something. And then we refill the bottles at home with tap water to take in the car or outside, etc. I don't trust that most bottled water isn't mainly just tap water anyway, and I don't trust water that just sits for a long period of time.

DaemonSeid 06-18-2008 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nittanyalum (Post 1669752)
We are all tap water, all the time (of course, our local tap water is suitable for drinking, I realize there are parts of the country this isn't true). If we buy bottles, it's only if we're out of the house and it's the only option or if we're camping or something. And then we refill the bottles at home with tap water to take in the car or outside, etc. I don't trust that most bottled water isn't mainly just tap water anyway, and I don't trust water that just sits for a long period of time.

just don't drink the water from tap in DC unless you want to get sick!

BabyPiNK_FL 06-18-2008 12:49 PM

The water that comes out of my tap is Dasani so...yeah. (The city is a local supplier).

KSUViolet06 06-18-2008 01:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BabyPiNK_FL (Post 1669828)
The water that comes out of my tap is Dasani so...yeah. (The city is a local supplier).

You're lucky.

I drink all bottled water all the time (the tap in the area is gross), but I always recycle the bottles.

Senusret I 06-18-2008 01:09 PM

I drink DC tap water from time to time if nothing else is available.

DaemonSeid 06-18-2008 01:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1669848)
I drink DC tap water from time to time if nothing else is available.

and you are still alive...maaaaan!

Senusret I 06-18-2008 01:31 PM

lol i come from strong mandinka stock

DaemonSeid 06-18-2008 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Senusret I (Post 1669865)
lol i come from strong mandinka stock

**walking away from that one...HAHAHAhaaaa!!!**

Still BLUTANG 06-18-2008 03:08 PM

i have the brita pitcher at home, and i'm thinking about getting one of those things you put on the tap to filter the water as it comes out. it's summer time and i'm always refilling a travel bottle and it gets messy.

Unregistered- 06-18-2008 03:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 33girl (Post 1669705)

I have a Brita at home & a water cooler at work, so the only time I ever drink bottled water is if I'm on the road or at a street fair or something.

I've been trying to convince TPTB to put a water cooler here at work! The tap water here is the best by far so consuming it is no problem.

With all the $$$ I'm spending on everything else, I really don't need to be paying extra whenever I buy cases of water. The beverage deposit fees added to the receipt whenever you buy bottles meeting the criteria as an incentive to get us to take our bottles and cans to the recycling centers.

The 5 cents a bottle is good incentive, but those centers are so spread out that I usually end up spending the money I make on gas, anyway.

UGAalum94 06-18-2008 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OTW (Post 1669929)
I've been trying to convince TPTB to put a water cooler here at work! The tap water here is the best by far so consuming it is no problem.

With all the $$$ I'm spending on everything else, I really don't need to be paying extra whenever I buy cases of water. The beverage deposit fees added to the receipt whenever you buy bottles meeting the criteria as an incentive to get us to take our bottles and cans to the recycling centers.

The 5 cents a bottle is good incentive, but those centers are so spread out that I usually end up spending the money I make on gas, anyway.

That's kind of an interesting issue really, the environmental cost of not recycling vs. the costs related to recycling, maybe more so because you are in Hawaii. Do they ship the crap to the mainland to be recycled or do you have that kind of manufacturing and recycling there. (I apologize for my dumbness on this point.)


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