Ten Concerns about Bottled Water
Excerpted from Inside
the Bottle – an Expose of the Bottled Water Industry
by Tony Clarke
A Polaris Institute Report
2005
(see
http://www.insidethebottle.org/
and
http://www.polarisinstitute.org )
Price Gouging – what kind of price mark-ups do we find in
the bottled water market? Single serving
bottles of water range in price from $1.00 to $1.75
Water Takings – when the label on the bottle says ‘pure
spring water’, where does the water really come from, who owns it, and how is
it regulated? In the
Transforming Water – what kinds of filtering a processing methods to companies use to turn ‘real’ water into bottled water? What’s the difference between bottled water and tap water? The Big-4 bottled water companies imply their elaborate ‘proprietary’ treatment processes are the justification for the higher cost of their products. Yet, unlike other raw materials such as timber, minerals, oil, and gas, which are transformed into identifiably new products, bottled water is simply water transformed into water. The industry’s treatment processes do not guarantee that bottled water is safer than tap water; in fact, a number of studies have demonstrated that bottled water is often less safe than tap water. Consider that one treatment process uses bromate, which is considered to be a carcinogen.
Contaminating Water – what evidence is there to support
the industry’s claim that bottled water is superior to tap water? The International Bottled Water Association proclaims
that bottled water is superior to tap water. Yet several peer-reviewed
scientific studies have found disturbing concentrations of toxic ingredients
such as arsenic and mercury in their bottled water samplings. When Coca-Cola
launched its Dasani product
in the
Marketing Schemes – what kinds of marketing and
advertising schemes are used by companies to sell what is really ‘water
transformed into water’? The tagline for
Pepsi’s Aquafina says it
all: “So pure we promise nothing.” Through relentless advertising, the Big-4
companies have turned bottled water into “
Eco-threatening – what environmental damage is caused by
the escalating use and disposal of plastic bottles?
Bottled water containers labelled
with images of pristine natural environments are rapidly becoming a major
threat to the environment and to our health. These containers release highly
dangerous toxic chemicals and contaminants into the air and water when they are
manufactured, and again when they are burned or buried. Yet these same plastic
packages are becoming the fastest-growing form of municipal solid waste in the
Recycling Record – what is the track record of the Big-4 when it comes to recycling? Recycling rates for plastic bottles has been in steady decline since 1995, despite the explosion in plastic-bottle use. Not only has the industry promoted the shift from glass to plastic containers, and failed to live up to the promises about using more recycled materials in their containers, they actively oppose legislation aimed at improving recycling rates for plastic bottles, and requiring beverage container deposits. More sinister still is their use of a deceptive logo on their products that misleads consumers into thinking the product can be recycled, when the opposite is often true.
Manipulating Consumers – why are people turning from tap
water to bottled water? What’s really fuelling the new bottled water culture?
Ten years ago, most people relied on their
municipal system for all their drinking water. Today close to one-fifth of the
population in
School Contracting – what marketing devices have the
bottled water companies used in cash-strapped schools, colleges, and
universities? Across the
Water Privatising
– what role and impact does the bottled water industry have on the
privatization of public water utilities in the