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http://www.greenlivingonline.com/OurWorld/all-the-water-none-of-the-plastic/

All the water, none of the plastic

All the water, none of the plastic

Image: istockphoto.com/Stephanie DeLay

March 22 was World Water Day and throughout Canada university students are pushing back against water bottles and the companies that are commercializing this precious resource to create water bottle free zones.


Water is on the biggest commercial products on the market today. Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Nestle, and Danone all make major profits from selling bottled water. The results have been an explosion on water bottles that are polluting the earth.

Across Canada
In fifteen different schools from Memorial University in Newfoundland to Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia, students are creating zones where organizations or businesses promise not to give or sell water contained within a plastic bottle. The desire to rid campuses of water bottles is motivated by environmental concerns as well as social justice worries.

Inside the bottle
"Start with production, bottles are actually made out of crude oil and natural gas," said Andrea Harden, an Inside the Bottle campaigner with the Polaris Institute. "Then there is the transportation across a city, a province, a country, or even an entire continent, that has a significant greenhouse gas impact. Plus, what happens once the water is consumed? The bottles are either recycled or thrown in the garbage, and I have seen a lot of bottles in garbages or washed up on shores. These are serious environmental impacts when we have tap water and we can consume it for free and it is sustainable."

Guelph leads the way
One of the universities leading the charge to kick plastic bottles off campuses is the University of Guelph, Ontario. There the Guelph Students for Environmental Change (GSEC) have campaigned student groups and faculties to create policies promising to never use bottled water in their events.

So far, GSEC has gotten a lot of support, with everyone from the Muslim Student Association to the University of Guelph Campus Radio Station promising to stop using water bottles.

Changing habits
Silvie Fojtik, a fourth year student in water resource management and leader in the GSEC "Tap-In" program, is hoping to even bring the water bottle free message to September’s First Year Orientation Week by renting a large water tank and parking it in a central location on campus. That way any thirsty first year student could just wander to the tap with their frosh week mug and quench their thirst.

Fojtik admits that the program being launched this week with some family friendly rallies, public lectures, and even a taste testing, has to overcome some major obstacles such as making sure there are public water fountains and that businesses can still be profitable without water bottle revenue.

Image problems
One of the major hurdles is an image problem. People still equate bottled water with something healthy.

"One of the major reasons we get organizations to pledge is to remove exposure of bottled water, which is everywhere," said Fojtik. "If we can get professional events and groups on campus to show that they are comfortable using jugs and glasses, then it could disturb that image of bottled water being the only acceptable way of drinking water."

So, this Saturday, why not drink a toast to World Water Day by raising a glass of tap water, not a bottle.

Graeme Stemp-Morlock is a freelance science & environment writer based in Waterloo, Ontario. He is a regular contributor to Green Living.



Tags: water, water bottles, water conservation. Browse our full tag cloud.
7 Comments
posted Mar 25, 2008 - 3:22 pm by Kathleen Cameron
As someone who does oppose the excessive use of plastic, I do drink bottled water and not tap water. I drink mostly Culligan water out of the large plastic bottles because I do not want to drink water that has chemicals in it. The Culligan water has all the garbage chemicals removed via UV, deionization, and distillation. Tap water contains chlorine (a known carcinogen), floride (a known carcinogen), and upwards of hundreds of known carcinogenic and endrogenic substances, i.e. numerous types of medications, pesticides, herbicides, etc. and the breakdown products of these. No I don't like the use of plastic and if it came out in stainless I'd prefer to use that, however I do not want to drink contaminated water and ALL water that we now drink is contaminated - either on purpose or via non-point source pollution.
posted Mar 27, 2008 - 3:38 pm by Silvie Fojtik
I live in Guelph. Our municipal water comes from an underground supply, the Amabel aquifer. Nestle bottles water 6km away from us, by extracting water from the neighbouring aquifer. How is their water any different from our tap water? If Kathleen's logic is that ALL sources of water that we drink are contaminated, that also includes bottled water. If we are concerned about tap water, purchasing bottled water is not the solution. The solution is taking a trip to City Hall and ensuring that we have safe tap water. By purchasing bottled water, we disempower ourselves from upkeeping water as a human right; instead we encourage its commodification. That is another concern I have with Culligan: it is a step in privatizing water. It is one thing to sell treatment technology, and another when you are selling water. On our campus, bottled water costs 4000x more expensive over Guelph tap water.
In terms of types of medication, pesticides, herbicides, we need to question their consumption. Why do we even have pharmaceuticals pumping us with harmful drugs, which have mainly come from natural sources in the first place (pharmaceuticals spend millions traveling to South America to discover new plants, only to transform their medicinal values into a way of profiteering). Why do we have to have short, perfectly trimmed lawns? Since when was it necessary to be using pesticides? We need to look at issues on a greater scale.
On a final note, bottled water is considered a food product. This means it is not regulated by the Clean Water Act and instead is regulated by the Food Inspection Agency. They inspect a bottling plant once every three years. Tap water is more stringently regulated.
posted Apr 11, 2008 - 12:13 pm by Kelly
I drink bottled water because our tap water in Toronto tastes like garbage.

Im open to suggestions though...
Seems like you can either save yourself, or save the planet. Difficult to do both these days :(
posted Apr 15, 2008 - 10:39 pm by Lewis Garnier
This is more of a question as opposed to a comment.Do the large 5 Gal. contianers of Culligan water contain Bisphenol A .
posted Apr 17, 2008 - 11:46 am by Derrick
the Culligan water bottles are #7 plastic :(
posted Apr 21, 2008 - 6:01 pm by michelle
I very rarely purchased bottle water....we have a filter on our kitchen tap...and that is what we drink...filling stainless bottles....at least we have running water right in our homes....I don't have to walk 10 miles to get a jug of unfiltered water....water is priceless.... but we have put a price on it with our future..........
posted Apr 23, 2008 - 6:29 am by merlin
Over here in the UK folk are forever complaining about the rising price of petrol (gas), and there are frequent campaigns to try and reduce it. The government, OPEC and the petro-chemical guys get accused of profiteering. But some of these same people happily buy water from their supermarkets in plastic bottles, and, depending on what size bottles they buy the stuff in, it actually costs MORE per litre than the petrol (gas). This commodity incurs no tax. It doesn't have to be drilled out of the ground. It ain't a high risk inflammable liquid. It doesn't have to be tanked round the world. It requires no refinement or prosessing whatsoever, and carries no costly risks to the environment in the case of spillage. Oh yes, and it's totally renewable and doesn't make for much CO2 when consumed. So who are the profiteers, and who are the fools? If I were a politician, I'd tax the hell out of the bottled water industry, or maybe better just send them to some gulag somewhere.
As for saving the planet or saving yourself - I'm sorry to disilusion you, but unfortunately there are two tragic flaws to your comment: firstly, by avoiding bottled water you're not saving the planet (which will still be here behind us), but you will be mitigating the effects on the planet caused by human wastefulness and greed that threaten many species including our own; and of course, if we all don't do something about this collectively, you can't save yourself no matter how much bottled water you may drink.
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