Bear a plastic water bottle to your own hazard; the pressure of widespread view is forming on you. From top rating documentaries, to the written word and politics, the biggest debate in town is the terror around bottled water and the waste its industry forces.
The producing, transportation and waste of water in petrochemical plastic bottles eats up huge waste of water along with energy, and generates large quantities of greenhouse gases and waste.
Director of the hot new documentary ‘Tapped: get off the bottle’ Stephanie Soechtig claims “1500 water bottles end up in landfill every second – that’s 30 million water bottles a day! We wanted to show people just how much waste is generated by bottled water.” The team of Tapped are publicizing the show with their across-America roadshow, collecting donations from donors to take down their water bottle abuse and taking their discarded plastic water bottle for a reusable stainless steel bottle. Download Tapped from Amazon or iTunes.
A short film ‘The Story of Bottled Water’ was released on World Water Day in March. From the pen of Annie Leonard of the critically acclaimed ‘The Story of Stuff’, this short animated film shows the method that amounts to tricking Americans into wasting more than half a billion bottles of water each week, compared with a few cents cost for clean tap water. Find this animation on You Tube.
Through her book ‘Bottlemania’, investigator Elizabeth Royte demonstrates one of the biggest marketing cons of the twentieth century and gives a super environmental alarm bell. She explores the situations we must come to deal with. Who has ownership of our drinking water? What could happen when a bottled-water company holds your town’s water source? Is the water that comes from your tap completely safe? What is the environmental footprint of making, transportation and waste of a plastic water bottle?
Politicians from around the nation are realising that they need to take responsibility – especially when the meetings in which they collate are huge consumers of bottled water. How often do we view a politician at a political debate drinking from a water bottle. Why can’t they should be able to locate a water glass in Parliament House.
Leslie Samuelrich of Corporate Accountability International, said “Cities and states are spending hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars on bottled water, and that’s not to mention what’s spent to deal with all the plastic bottles that are thrown out.”
In July 2009, the NSW rural town of Bundanoon became the first community from Australia to prohibited the sale of bottled water. About 60 places in the American states and a few places in Canada and the UK have lately ceased the spending of taxpayer money on bottled water.
Surely this issue will be brought to the table come World Water Week 2010 from September 5 to 11 in Stockholm, Sweden, the annual meeting for the environment’s most current water-related issues.
Article written by Tracey Bailey, founder of Biome Eco Stores.
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