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Here is a really interesting article, one I would simply not have expected to see in as mainstream a news source as US News. Bottled water, though challenged somewhat by the recent push to "green" concerns, worries about health, energy and garbage overload, still manages to trump almost every objection with its convenience and seemingly low price. The good news is that people are thinking about their behaviors, the discussions are cropping up everywhere, and as this article indicates, there are real problems with bottled water that more people need to know about.
File this news under "obviously." A comparison of the environmental effects of tap water versus bottled water by the Swiss Gas and Water Association, as reported by Treehugger today, states what we've long suspected: The environmental impact of bottledwater is up to 1,000 times as bad as that of tap water. Not to mention the effect on your wallet: Cases of bottled water add up, while the cost of clean, safe tap water (where your bottled water often comes from) is negligible, when you consider that most of what the water utility companies bill us for goes down a sink, washing machine, or shower drain.
But I won't tell you yet another thing that you already know. Instead, let's look at the ways that the bottled water industry is trying to revamp its image. The most prominent example is Fiji Green, whose ads I see each morning as I walk to work. The company, mindful of the bad rep of its product, announced its decision to go green months ago, and has put out literature and a website touting itself as "carbon negative," despite shipping water in plastic bottles halfway across the Earth. But wouldn't the most eco-friendly solution be for Fiji Water...not to exist? I'm obviously not the first or only person to raise the point. And other brands have followed suit. One wonders how, or if, the Fiji spin team will react to the Swiss study—or if they'll ever be called out for greenwashing, as Fiat and EasyJet were in their recent scolding by Britain's Advertising Standards Authority.
So, does the now official proof that bottled water is bad make you think twice when you head to the vending machine? Or will convenience always rule?

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