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The Story of Bottled Water

Should you be worried about your tap water? Yes, but not for the reason you expected.
— tags:

The Story of Bottled Water

Worried about what’s in your tap?

That’s exactly what the water bottling industry hoped when it developed brands like Dasani, Perrier, and Poland Springs, which promise to be “natural,” “pure,” “clean,” even “sexy” alternatives to tap water.

But the very companies that market those brands, like Nestlé and Coca Cola, are putting public water supplies in jeopardy in communities both in the United States and overseas. They’re selling us a product that is often not any cleaner than tap water, and is a lot pricier.

Bottled water is a scam. The simplest way to understand why is to watch a new, short film released today by the creators of The Story of Stuff. Like its predecessor, The Story of Bottled Water uses simple language and surprisingly charming stick figures to walk you through the perils of the bottled water economy. “Bottled water costs about 2,000 times more than tap water,” says Annie Leonard, the film’s narrator and director. “Can you imagine paying 2,000 times the price of anything else? How about a $10,000 sandwich?”

The Story of Bottled Water film still

Bottled water often comes straight from the tap, sometimes with a little filtering, sometimes not. It is not necessarily safer. For instance, in 2004, the Coca-Cola company had to recall all of its Dasani water from the United Kingdom, after officials discovered the water exceeded the legal limit for bromate, a carcinogen. The Environmental Working Group recently tested 10 brands of bottled water—on average, they contained eight chemical pollutants, no better than tap water.

But there’s something even more insidious about the way that the bottled water industry preys on our public water systems and tap water. Water is both the most basic of human needs and a product of nature. It can’t actually be manufactured, so bottling it up and selling it always means removing water from a public source. As the bottled water market has taken off, we’ve seen public water fountains begin to disappear. Meanwhile, citizens in rural towns have begun to take notice that water-bottling companies are trying to sell off water that actually belongs to them. Communities like Barnstead, New Hampshire have fought hard to keep Nestle from bottling and shipping away their local water.

living_water_garden028.jpgChina's Living Water Garden
Photo essay: Chengdu's most popular public park is is a 5.9 acre inner-city natural water treatment system.

We’ve gotten used to thinking we have more than enough water to go around in this country, but it’s not true. According to experts like Peter Gleick, the United States is facing a water crisis that will only get worse in coming years. Already major water supplies like the Ogallala Aquifer and Lake Mead, which together supply water for millions across the Southwest and Great Plains, are in big danger of running dry. Climate change is going to alter everything we know about water—how much stays in our reservoirs, how much snow falls in the Sierras, how our rivers flow, and how much we have available to drink, irrigate our crops, and water our lawns. When we let a private company control, bottle, or sell our water—whether it’s Coca-Cola or the private water operator Thames—we’re giving up some measure of control over our health, environment, lives, and futures.

In May, YES! Magazine will unveil a full issue about how to protect our water and keep it clean and accessible. You’ll read about radical breakthroughs in contentious Western water wars, about a community that bought its water back from private control, about farms that are learning how save water by taking care of soil, and about ways to get all the water you need, even if you live in the heart of the desert.

In the meantime, you can celebrate World Water Day by watching The Story of Bottled Water, and read more about campaigns to protect water in our online and magazine coverage.


Madeline Ostrander

Madeline Ostrander is senior editor of YES! Magazine.

Interested?
Life, Liberty, Water by Maude Barlow
A global water justice movement is demanding a change in international law to ensure the universal right to clean water for all.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Ostrander, M. (2010, March 22). The Story of Bottled Water. Retrieved February 10, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/the-story-of-bottled-water. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

"The Story of Bottled Water" is just a string of fables

Posted by Tom Lauria - IBWA at Mar 23, 2010 01:01 PM
I may work for the bottled water industry but even you folks at Yes can't believe Annie Leonard bizarre equivication of drinking bottled water with a pregnant woman smoking. Or her incorrect fib about gasoline. Plastic is made from oil by-products leftover from gasoline production. She doesn't understand natural spring water or the complexity of purified water. It takes far more than a plastic filter and a charcoal filter to meet FDA's tough standards of quality. Speaking of that, she also claims we're unregulated. Not true.‘The Story of Bottled Water’ takes a very cynical view of the intelligence of consumers by depicting them as being dupes and victims of industry, but we totally disagree. We think the opposite; that consumers are really quite thoughtful in selecting and enjoying a safe, healthy, convenient, calorie-free beverage that’s delicious, refreshing and a very smart drink choice. That’s the real story of bottled water.

bottled water

Posted by fred kirchner at Mar 23, 2010 06:02 PM
oh please. obviously she doesnot have a monetary interest in misinformation,you however do,it is your livelihood,bottled water is a scam pure and simple,the fact is consumers are becoming more common sense s,to see clever savvy,reusable containers are now gaining momentum,thankfully so.Have you ever seen a water processing plant from the road and noticed the security fences and gates,they take water seriously and make far less profit off it.When will corporations make enough money to satisfy their material desires and realize that the planet can only sustain so much.

Corporations

Posted by G. Glenn at Mar 31, 2010 03:34 PM
We as a nation need to realize that corporations are not people, they *cannot* make 'enough to satisfy their material desires and realize that the planet can only sustain so much.' They are legal entities designed to produce wealth for their investors, with no ability to make ethical distinctions; only people can do that.
   If we as a people want corporations to be limited in the destruction they can wreak in their pursuit of profit, we have to enforce limitations on them by way of regulation. If we want them to stop being able to enforce their will on our legislative system, we need to take away their ridiculous 'protections as persons' that was given them by a corrupted court, and stop them from bribing our public officials. Meanwhile, the investors who profit from them will try to scare us by telling us regulations will force the loss of jobs, weaken the economy, etc., etc. We have to decide what is most important to us, and find a balance between protection and unregulated freedom.

Tom Lauria is a tool of big business

Posted by Eva Radke at Apr 02, 2010 08:11 AM
Environmentally speaking, bottled water is a disaster.

You know it. You are a tool and a pawn. Congratuations, you sold you soul.

You know the truth and just so you little brain can shut down and sleep at night, you have convinced yourself of reasons to destroy the planet for what? The fat bank account, you no doubt have.

You are a destroyed human and I pity you.

Bottled Water's Many Benefits

Posted by Tom Lauria - IBWA at Apr 05, 2010 12:11 PM
Who can explain what streak of cruelty would prompt someone to write such hateful words? In any case, how caqn a person enjoy natural spring water if not from a bottle? Or professionally purified water scrubbed to FDA standards? Of all the beverages packaged in plastic on store shelves, water has no equal and should be the first liquid we bottle. From tap or bottle, water is an important element in everyone's life.

bottled water

Posted by Beth Antonsen at Apr 06, 2010 02:31 AM
I gave up drinking bottled water a couple years ago. The plastic bottles are filling up landfills and it is expensive. As a starving artist I have to pinch pennies. When I am thirsty for natures pure elixer I drink tap water with haleocetic acid in it which our local town water authority is fixing at great expense. When I grew up in this town we drank water from a muskeg bog damn. In the summer there were some type of bug larvae swimming around in it so we would get town water. I also drank freely from the many streams available living in a large wet temperate rainforest. I never got sick from the bugs or any of the streams and as for the haleocetic acid I figure I'm half way to 104 and by the time I acummulate enough of it I will be dead anyway so I don't worry. My favorite water comes from the cisterns of family and friends who live outside the city limits. They collect our wonderful rain. Hopefully there are not to many chemicals in it drifting over from China. Corporations are not to be trusted because their bottom lines are based on money and greed and not their grandchildrens futures. They aren't people but their shareholders are and so are the CEOs. We all make choices some people chose greed and some do the right thing. I choose to not get ripped off for something that falls from the sky and I can collect off my roof.

"selecting safe healthy beverage"

Posted by Pedro at Jun 15, 2010 04:06 PM
you mean, like the water we're already paying for in our tap? Or free from a fountain, that has tougher regulations than your water companies?

Bottled water vs safe drinking water

Posted by Cheryl BANKS at Dec 10, 2011 04:28 PM
It sounds to me that you are describing safe drinking water. It is delicious and runs out of my tap. Why lug plastic bottles home from the store? And, why don't you complete the circle and do something with the empties?

bottled water

Posted by Kristen at Mar 24, 2010 09:16 AM
I have been saying this for over 10 years!! what are companies like Nestle, Coke, and Pepsi going to do when they themselves have polluted the local water supply to such a point that even they can not sell "their" precious product? Water is a finite system. There is no more water now that there was before. Water belongs to every man, woman, child, river, stream, ocean, fir tree, lizard, and spider on the face of the entire planet. Its time we protect what is ours!

bottled water

Posted by adrian h at Apr 05, 2010 08:56 AM
with regards to kristens comment: "..what are companies like Nestle, Coke, and Pepsi going to do when they themselves have polluted the local water supply to such a point that even they can not sell "their" precious product? Water is a finite system."

Lets take this one step further and realize that the destruction of life itself and total cultural destabilization are the ultimate name of the game for corporate/military power and control. Financial profit is not even enough. In this game Coke, Nestle and Pepsi are all on the same team.

bottled water article too broad

Posted by Patrick Dieter at Mar 26, 2010 05:01 PM
While there may be some truth buried in your biased piece, you have made a number of generalizations and omissions. I have nothing to do with the bottled water industry, nor do I consume very much of the product. This is due to your well-highlighted point regarding the cost.

You have, however, lumped all bottled waters together. I am sure that the cheaper and "big business" versions of bottled water meet your facts fairly closely. Many do not. Yes, there are funny little pieces of paper glued to the plastic bottles. They are called "labels" and they have information encoded on them in the esoteric code known as "words."

The manufacturer cannot claim water is filtered if it is not. Neither can it claim a specific spring as a source unless it is true. Truth in advertising laws affect all products, including these.

Tap water almost always contains either chlorine, flouride, or both. I am far from being a purist about such things, but both chemicals are potentially toxic. If my tap water reeks like a bleach bottle, I do not consider it potable. I prefer the home filter pitcher method, which does remove most of the chlorine and most bad tastes and odors from the water. If I am away from home and want water to drink, I would NOT consider tap water, except as a last resort. I don't know the condition of the local plumbing, or which inspectors may be on the take. Yes, I WILL read the label, and I will NOT be fooled by fluffy, meaningless words, such as "natural" or "spring-fed."

All in all, I find your article to be a cheap shot, and highly biased, not to mention unoriginal. This conspiracy theory has been beaten to death already. Find a better axe to grind!

Bottled water or tap?

Posted by Nigel T. Shaw at Mar 29, 2010 01:01 PM
I started using bottled water a few years ago but have recently reverted to drinking tap water. Living in the UK, our public water is very safe, although it does apparently contain some fluoride. I now filter water straight from the tap and find the product, in terms of taste, just as acceptable as bottled water. Of course, my ideal choice would be to drink directly from a spring. I feel sure, however, that spring water when stored in plastic bottles must be affected by the chemicals used in the manufacturing process. Water sold in glass bottles would be my second choice but the cost is prohibitive. For me, in terms of cost and water quality I am quite satisfied with my self-filtered tap supply.

bottled water

Posted by Joyce Jackson at Mar 30, 2010 06:59 AM
While I agree that the sale of bottled water in plastic bottles is rooted in corporate greed, I wish someone would promote an alternative that will appeal to the general public. For the record I do not buy bottled water except on those rare occasions when I'm caught away from home with no viable option. But I do fill my 5 gallon jug with filtered water which I drink in preference to tap water. Why? Partly because it tastes a lot better, also because it is at least a bit healthier. And I stay away from drinking fountains that deliver metal with the drinking water. Instead of drinking fountains, why not have public machines that dispense filtered water into an individual's container? Or one that dispenses filtered water in recyclable glass bottles? The point is, tap water doesn't taste good and doesn't come in an "on the go" container, and drinking fountain water tastes terrible and isn't healthy. Let's brainstorm some alternatives.
Not to say I disagree with the criticism of the privatization of water. I'm looking for public, community alternatives.

bottled water

Posted by Wilson at Apr 03, 2010 06:08 AM
Enjoyed drinking my water this morning from my re-fillable container...!

Bottled water has chlorine

Posted by HagarTheHun at Apr 04, 2010 04:26 PM
I visited with a friend who works for a bottled water plant. He said that they're required to add chlorine to make sure that there are no bacteria in the water!

bottled water

Posted by Leslie Scales at May 19, 2010 12:06 PM
pick your poison! Tap water & groundwater containing hexavalent chromium cannnot be filtered. (heavy metals penetrate) see our website: www.earthspeak.org Standard EPA tests do NOT include chromium, and must be specifically requested. That is just one chemical I happen to have researched. How many others are out there? What is the source of bottled water? What you don't know can kill you! And it's not Black & White!

Dasani = tap

Posted by wendy a. at Jul 09, 2010 04:23 PM
Here in Baltimore, Coca Cola's Dasani bottled water comes from Liberty Reservoir, the same place my tap water comes from.

Bottled Water

Posted by Rands Moffatt at Apr 19, 2011 09:21 AM
I drink bottled water and am proud of it. I use it as a substitute for the scourge of us dieters, soda pop. One of my regrets is that it does not contain Floride for which we fought long and hard to have added to our tap water.
We can resolve the bottle problem. In Alberta we have a 10 cent deposit on every liquid container of one liter(Quart in the US) and a 25 Cent deposit on any larger container. This results in effective recycling and gives the Scouts and the street people a source of income too.
The real problem is the slovinly habits of too many of our citizens. We do not not need to throw our packaging into the streets, rivers, sea etc. It can be recycled effectively.


reasearch

Posted by Emily at Aug 30, 2011 10:44 AM
has anyone looked into what the woman said in the video about our 'recyclables' going to landfills in india??

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