Is bottled water over rated?

Search

Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2005
Messages
2,475
Tokens
Ideally you should get a few 5 gal. bottles and go to a nearby spring and draw your own water. Obviously not all springs are clean so be aware. Tap water is a gamble and as someone already mentioned 'it depends on where you live'. If I go 2 towns over the tap water sucks. I've been in some states where it actually tastes like dirty water out of the tap, real sad. If you use filtration systems in your home you know how scary it can be when you go to change filters. The junk that collects on the filters will scare you away from tap water forever.
Good points made on what a scam the bottled water industry is though. It is a giant farce and don't assume you are getting natural spring water. How does CocaCola have the balls to charge a dollar for a little bottle of non-spring water? The bottles probably cost them about a penny apiece so figure out that profit! Sickening.
 

Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2006
Messages
16,073
Tokens
Ideally you should get a few 5 gal. bottles and go to a nearby spring and draw your own water. Obviously not all springs are clean so be aware. Tap water is a gamble and as someone already mentioned 'it depends on where you live'. If I go 2 towns over the tap water sucks. I've been in some states where it actually tastes like dirty water out of the tap, real sad. If you use filtration systems in your home you know how scary it can be when you go to change filters. The junk that collects on the filters will scare you away from tap water forever.
Good points made on what a scam the bottled water industry is though. It is a giant farce and don't assume you are getting natural spring water. How does CocaCola have the balls to charge a dollar for a little bottle of non-spring water? The bottles probably cost them about a penny apiece so figure out that profit! Sickening.

Not around here...I wouldn't mind investing in one of the filtration systems for the home though. I've looked into them before and they run around 2k.
 

Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2006
Messages
16,073
Tokens
I guess it depends where you live, but when I did it there were just a bunch of stuff that looks like fish scales

Did you test the water from the aquarium?
 

Rx God
Joined
Nov 1, 2002
Messages
39,226
Tokens
I was at the game tonight. Was told bottle was $3, tap was free. Sometimes i wonder about the ice they put in the cups, shit is in the wide open, all kinds of stuff can fall in it.

I like spring water myself. Not sure there is much of a difference, but I will pay 10c a bottle, what the hey

The ice is always suspect. Ice machines often NEVER get cleaned.

I'm suspect about draft beer too. It can be carried dozens of feet in a line, under a floor that NEVER gets cleaned.
 

Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2006
Messages
16,073
Tokens
The ice is always suspect. Ice machines often NEVER get cleaned.

I'm suspect about draft beer too. It can be carried dozens of feet in a line, under a floor that NEVER gets cleaned.

Anyone from around here will remember a local guy on one of the news stations named Marvin Zindler.

He used to check out restaurant inspections and his famous line was "slime in the ice machine!"
 

Rx God
Joined
Nov 1, 2002
Messages
39,226
Tokens
Ideally you should get a few 5 gal. bottles and go to a nearby spring and draw your own water. Obviously not all springs are clean so be aware. Tap water is a gamble and as someone already mentioned 'it depends on where you live'. If I go 2 towns over the tap water sucks. I've been in some states where it actually tastes like dirty water out of the tap, real sad. If you use filtration systems in your home you know how scary it can be when you go to change filters. The junk that collects on the filters will scare you away from tap water forever.
Good points made on what a scam the bottled water industry is though. It is a giant farce and don't assume you are getting natural spring water. How does CocaCola have the balls to charge a dollar for a little bottle of non-spring water? The bottles probably cost them about a penny apiece so figure out that profit! Sickening.


This seems risky as HELL, how do you know what's in that water ?

Springs are kind of scarce around places like LA and Vegas too !

Maybe if you live in Colorado, and can get fresh snowmelt water at 12,000 feet or something. Even then , what if Bigfoot took a dump upstream ?
 

There's no such thing as leftover crack
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
5,924
Tokens
A couple of weeks ago there was a water main break about 10 miles west of Boston. For about 5 days two million people were told not to drink tap water, use it to brush teeth, wash dishes, etc. without boiling it first. Within an hour or two of news getting out, every store was completely sold out of bottled water. At that time, I don't think anyone in the region thought bottled water was overrated.
 

Rx God
Joined
Nov 1, 2002
Messages
39,226
Tokens
I can see it only if your tapwater tastes bad, like in LA, LV,SD, etc. In that case I'd use the machines in front of stores, or get a filtration system.



<!--google_ad_section_start--> <!-- <headline>Bottled-water scam finally feels squeeze</headline> <source>Boston Globe</source> <teasetext>It’s sad that ending the bottled-water fad took a recession, when common sense should have kicked in a long time ago.</teasetext> <byline>Derrick Z. Jackson </byline> <date>August 25, 2009</date> -->
Derrick Z. Jackson
<input name="logotype" value="Globe Story" type="hidden"> Bottled-water scam finally feels squeeze

539w.jpg


By Derrick Z. Jackson August 25, 2009 <!-- Email to a Friend , this is a hidden form revealed via click listener --> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript" src="http://cache.boston.com/universal/js/bcom_etaf_scripts.js"></script> <!-- e-mail widget -->
pointer_top.gif
E-mail this article


<!-- titleBar --> <form action="" method="post" id="theEMTOFForm" autocomplete="off"> <input name="sender_name" id="sender_name" value="" type="hidden"> <input name="story_url" id="story_url" value="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2009/08/25/bottled_water_scam_finally_feels_squeeze" type="hidden"> <label for="recipient_email">To:</label> Invalid email address
<input id="recipient_email" name="recipient_email" class="noerr" value="Separate multiple addresses with a comma" onclick="this.value='';" onfocus="this.style.color='#000';" type="text"> <label for="personalMessage">Add a personal message:</label> <textarea type="text" id="message" name="message" onchange="this.value=this.value.substring(0,80)" onkeyup="this.value=this.value.substring(0,80)"></textarea> <label for="sender_email">Your e-mail:</label> Invalid email address
<input id="sender_email" name="sender_email" class="noerr" type="text"> <input class="form-button" value="Send" type="submit"> </form>
loading_icon.gif
Sending your article


<!-- sendingArticle --> Your article has been sent.


<!-- sendingArticle -->
<!-- innerContainer -->
pointer_bottom.gif

<!-- bdc_emailWidget --> <!-- end ETAF -->
  • Email|
  • Print|
  • Reprints|
  • <script showbranding="0" src="http://d.yimg.com/ds/badge.js" badgetype="text">bostoncom751:http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2009/08/25/bottled_water_scam_finally_feels_squeeze/</script>Yahoo! Buzz|
  • <script type="text/javascript" src="http://w.sharethis.com/button/sharethis.js#tabs=web%2Cpost&charset=utf-8&services=facebook%2Cdigg%2Cstumbleupon%2Ctwitter%2Creddit%2Cdelicious%2Cmixx%2Cmyspace%2Cnewsvine%2Cblogger%2Ctypepad%2Cwordpress%2Ctechnorati%2Clinkedin%2Cslashdot%2Cgoogle_bmarks%2Cyahoo_bmarks%2Cwindows_live%2Cfriendfeed%2Cpropeller%2Cblogmarks%2Cfurl%2Cblinklist%2Cfriendster&style=default&publisher=e1e0ea5a-a326-4731-b1d1-f21623043511"></script>ShareThis
Text size – +
<!-- end tools -->
<!-- End utility -->
<!-- End headTools -->
<!-- End articleHeader --> WE DON’T MISS the water when the cash runs dry. Bottled water, that is. That refreshing news came recently as <org idsrc="other-OTC" value="NSRGF;NSRGY">Nestle</org> reported nearly a 5 percent drop in bottled water sales in North America and Western Europe. That company bottles water under the familiar names of Poland Spring, Perrier, S. Pellegrino, and Deer Park.

<table id="commentInviteBox" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tbody><tr><td rowspan="2" style="width: auto;"> </td><td class="commentInvite">Discuss</td></tr><tr><td>COMMENTS (135)</td></tr></tbody></table>




Pepsi’s Aquafina and Coke’s Dasani reported declining or weakening bottled-water sales as well. The president of Pepsi’s North American bottling group, Rob King, said in a July conference call, “In just a tough economic environment, one of the first things that a shopper can do is consume tap water as opposed to purchasing bottled water.’’

The sad part is that ending the bottled-water fad took a recession, when common sense should have kicked in long ago.

While some bottled water does come from the natural springs and mountain lakes depicted on the labels, most is just municipal tap water - water that is packaged and sold at enormous cost. Two years ago, the Earth Policy Institute estimated that each gallon of bottled water costs $10 a gallon to go from the groundwater to your lips. Each bottle of water kicks the environment twice, first with unnecessary plastic containers and then with the fuel that is burned to transport this heavy liquid load to your door, supermarket, or vending machine. The cost is currently four times the cost of a gallon of regular gasoline.

This sham is so ridiculous that the Government Accountability Office, which studied the issue for a House committee, reported this summer that the energy costs of delivering bottled water to a consumer in Los Angeles were 1,100 to 2,000 times more than the energy cost of tap water, depending on how far away the filled bottles traveled.

GAO researchers also noted that Americans say they drink filtered or bottled water for health reasons. Nearly half of state officials around the nation report that their consumers believe bottled water is safer than tap water. This obviously cannot be true when the bottled water is tap water.

Yet, annual bottled-water consumption more than doubled between 1997 and 2007, from 13.4 gallons a person to 29.3 gallons. Massachusetts requires the source of bottled water to be put on the label, the GAO noted, but more detailed information is hard to come by anywhere. The GAO found that in a review of 83 bottled-water labels, only one label contained limited water-quality or health information.

Such information was seemingly available on the Web or by telephone for 34 companies, but the GAO found that 13 of these water-quality reports - more than a third - were incomplete or unclear. The GAO concluded that the Environmental Protection Agency’s rules for tap water are generally stronger than the Food and Drug Administration’s regulation of bottled water.

So much for the illusion that bottled water is healthier than tap water.

Meanwhile, the bottles themselves remain a symbol of our wasteful times. Three-quarters of water bottles end up in landfills.

In House testimony last month, GAO’s director on natural resources and the environment, John Stephenson, said consumers would likely benefit from more information than they can find on the unhelpful labels on bottled water. Then again, if shoppers knew more about the product, they might not buy bottled water at all.

In one of the more outrageous examples of bottled-water scamming, the Merced (Calif.) Sun-Star reported in June how the <org idsrc="NYSE" value="SWY">Safeway</org> supermarket chain turns Merced city water into an enormous profit. “In Safeway’s case,’’ the newspaper reported, “they pay more than $1,000 a month for more than a million gallons of water. The retail cost for that much-purified bottled water at Safeway is just under $3 million. Safeway would not say how much it costs them to produce their water.’’ Yet Safeway spokeswoman Teena Massingill told the Sun-Star, “We are providing a product that did not exist previously.’’

Last I heard, water existed before bottles, and before Safeway. Thankfully, consumers are beginning to remember that, too.

Derrick Z. Jackson can be reached at jackson@globe.com.
dingbat_story_end_icon.gif
 

Member
Joined
Sep 18, 2005
Messages
2,475
Tokens
This seems risky as HELL, how do you know what's in that water ?

Springs are kind of scarce around places like LA and Vegas too !

Maybe if you live in Colorado, and can get fresh snowmelt water at 12,000 feet or something. Even then , what if Bigfoot took a dump upstream ?

As someone else had mentioned there are places where springs are scarce. In that case definitely look into some sort of filtering, even if it is Brita which I have used off and on and they are way better than plain tap water.
There are testing kits you can find if you want to test water yourself but if it is local you usually go by word of mouth ... if water is foul someone will let it be known. If you should come across one of those annoying Bigfoot turds (this has happened to me at least a dozen times) you would be wise to gather up fecal specimen and deposit into untainted zip-lock bag. Transport home, sun-bake and then sell on Ebay for a quick $2500. Gracias amigos.
 

Member
Joined
Aug 20, 2007
Messages
12,076
Tokens
Guess it depends on your location. Because bottle water is golden in Tijuana Mexico
 

Rx God
Joined
Nov 1, 2002
Messages
39,226
Tokens
I think Mexico is an obvious choice for not drinking tapwater, who knows what cooties are in that water ? pretty much most of the desert SW states, too.
 

RX Hall of Famer
Joined
Feb 26, 2008
Messages
1,132
Tokens
there are some bottles waters that def taste different....figi for example taste different then tap water....then again I might be a sucker.

Personally dasani taste like shit and I would rather drink my tap water.

Seriously though, I know I am guilty of buying a $1.50 bottle of water from time to time which is robbery.

Brb going to run outside with my mouth open and catch some rain in my mouth
 

Member
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
10,597
Tokens
isnt bottled water like 30% or something just tap water?
 

New member
Joined
Apr 9, 2009
Messages
125
Tokens
If you're unfortunate enough to live in Las Vegas, you really have no choice but to drink bottled water.
 

New member
Joined
Jun 2, 2006
Messages
29,253
Tokens
Why are you diluting the Fiji?
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,115,266
Messages
13,522,893
Members
100,249
Latest member
mcisk666
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com