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10-01-08, 09:01
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#1 (permalink)
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Administrator
DavidB is offline
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Autopia... Where else!
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Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
We all think the cost of gasoline is a killer, but have you stopped to calculate what bottled water really costs? On the price-per-gallon meter, beer is a darn good deal!
Well, here's a bit-o-info from Berkeley that sets things straight on bottled water. What a scam!
The crystal-clear mountain springs, sparkling glaciers, and pristine landscapes pictured on bottles and in ads must help sell bottled water, judging by the numbers.
The average American drinks more than 24 gallons of bottled water each year -- more than milk, coffee, or beer. Only soda is more popular, but bottled water is catching up, its sales more than doubling in the U.S. during the past decade, totaling nearly $10 billion last year.
But look behind the pictures and names. Glacier Clear Water, for example, doesn't come from a glacial source, but a municipal water supply -- tap water, in other words -- in Tennessee. That might look like Mt. Everest on the bottle of Everest Water, but inside is treated municipal water from somewhere in Texas.
The story is similar for Aquafina and Dasani. Even when bottled water is not tap water, the rules are loose enough that "spring" water may actually come from wells or aquifers. Some bottled waters do come from mountain springs or glacial sources, but they are a minority.
Many people, suspicious of tap water, buy bottled because they think it's more natural, purer, more healthful and better tasting. But the facts usually prove otherwise.
Bursting the bubble
The source. It's not a negative that many bottled waters come from municipal water supplies -- except that consumers may not realize they're spending $5 or $10 a week on bottled tap water. Municipal supplies are excellent sources of drinking water, and Americans (along with Canadians and people in most other industrialized nations) have a right to be proud of their public water systems.
Who is watching? Tap water is strictly regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and monitored by municipal suppliers. Bottled water, in contrast, is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) only if it is shipped across state lines or is imported. In some ways the FDA standards are weaker than the EPA's, and its testing far less frequent.
In any case, most bottled water is packaged and sold within one state, so it's subject only to state regulation, which varies greatly -- and in some states is nonexistent. California has some of the strictest regulations. Most bottlers belong to the International Bottled Water Association, a trade group that has its own guidelines, though it's hard to know how good such self-regulation is.
What researchers have found. Several studies have found that while most bottled water is of high quality, some is out of line with the strict standards for tap water.
A few years ago, for instance, a study comparing bottled waters with tap water from Cleveland found that one-quarter of the bottled waters had significantly higher bacterial counts than tap water. This doesn't mean that the bottled waters contained enough bacteria to cause illness, but enough to raise a red flag -- and these findings certainly dispel the myth of the purity of bottled water.
What taste tests show. In blind taste tests, most people can't tell the difference between bottled and tap. Sometimes plastic bottles can impart a slight plastic taste, leading some people to worry about chemical residues. The plastic bottles are safe, however.
Nutritional benefits? Only "mineral water" (a tiny part of the bottled-water business) has extra nutrients, and even these minerals don't add up to much. Tap water does usually have one important nutrient seldom found in the bottles -- fluoride, which is added to most supplies to reduce cavities in children. Bottlers generally filter out the fluoride from municipal water.
The environment. If you care about conservation of resources, tap water is by far the better choice. More than a million tons of plastic is used every year to make water bottles. It takes lots of energy to make, ship, and refrigerate the bottles -- and energy production creates air pollution. Most of the plastic, which is not biodegradable, ends up clogging our landfills.
When bottled water is a good idea
In some places, and at some times, bottled water is safer than tap -- notably in the developing world, where the water supply is risky. Moreover, millions of Americans and Canadians get their water from unregulated private wells, which are more likely to be contaminated.
On rare occasions water from a public utility temporarily becomes unsafe, in which case the utility must by law notify consumers and tell them what to do. (This may happen after flooding, as was seen after hurricane Katrina.)
If your tap water is contaminated, however, your best long-term option is to filter it -- that's more convenient and cheaper than bottled water. The same is true if you know your water is high in lead (from plumbing pipes) or if your tap water simply has an off flavor or smell.
© University of California, Berkeley
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10-19-08, 06:07
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#2 (permalink)
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Standup&Sitdown Detailer
hondaguy2582 is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: macomb, Michigan
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
Bottled water is a scam period. Its no different than tap water. Just get a filter for your water system, or get a distiller if you have the extra cash. For 20-25 cents per gallon, you cant beat it!!!
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10-19-08, 06:27
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#3 (permalink)
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Buffing in the Buff
Labster is offline
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Location: Macedonia, OH
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
My parents have a reverse osmosis filtration on their water. Tastes GREAT! Shame I don't live at home anymore 
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10-19-08, 06:38
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#4 (permalink)
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Buff-N-Bling Detail King
razr007 is offline
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 121
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
Quote:
Originally Posted by hondaguy2582
Bottled water is a scam period. Its no different than tap water. Just get a filter for your water system, or get a distiller if you have the extra cash. For 20-25 cents per gallon, you cant beat it!!!
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i agree a big scam you get filter and some bottles and you start your own water supply that is what i do plus i recycle bottles after about 5-10 times of using saves alot of money
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10-19-08, 06:42
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#5 (permalink)
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BigAl3 is offline
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 8,378
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
i couldn't believe the price when i first saw how much Fiji water was...
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10-19-08, 06:45
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#6 (permalink)
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Too Old to be Doing This
az57chevy is offline
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Tempe, AZ
Posts: 397
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
And imagine how much resources are wasted trucking it to the final customer. There is even some water that comes from Finland that local hotel offers. What a waste of energy!!
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10-19-08, 06:49
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#7 (permalink)
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Registered User
Robb is offline
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 645
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
Some say right on the bottle that they use tap water 
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10-20-08, 08:10
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#8 (permalink)
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Practical Perfectionist
Accumulator is offline
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 24,898
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
Yeah, you gotta watch that bottled water is at least as good as tap water, and yeah my multi-filtered/conditioned/UV-sterilized/RO water tastes better (and is probably a *lot* closer to pure), but those bottles are very convenient; it's an easy way to always have water with you.
Heh heh, before somebody says "just fill up a bottle with your RO water..", sorry, I find it a hassle, especially cleaning the bottles (backwash and all, for one thing and lip-balm mess for another). Once you filter out all the chlorine, you have to be a bit careful. My wife refills bottles with RO, but I seldom do...and guess which one of us *always* has water with them 
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10-20-08, 10:24
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#9 (permalink)
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Shinier than thou
qwertydude is offline
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Norwalk, CA not CT
Posts: 404
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
You've got to watch this then. Penn and Teller's B u ll Sh it.
SurfTheChannel - Penn Teller ******** - Season 1 Episode 7
I love the tap water brought in a fancy restaurant in bottles and having a water sommelier. People actually swear each water is different lol.
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10-20-08, 10:38
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#10 (permalink)
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Registered User
Mark77 is offline
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Helsinki, Finland
Posts: 839
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
Quote:
Originally Posted by az57chevy
And imagine how much resources are wasted trucking it to the final customer. There is even some water that comes from Finland that local hotel offers. What a waste of energy!!
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Funny you mentioned that. There was a recent test here that showed that our tap water is cleaner and better than any bottled water you get in the stores, and here people buy water from France or where ever it's from.
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10-20-08, 11:04
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#11 (permalink)
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Registered User
dublifecrisis is offline
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 581
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
i love tap water! in fact, when I detail cars in my own garage, I usually don't go inside much so the kids don't see me and cause distractions. I drink water right out of the hose and it's frickin tasty! love it.
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10-20-08, 11:19
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#12 (permalink)
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BigAl3 is offline
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 8,378
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Re: Busting The Myth On Bottled Water
these days you can just go to walmart and just guy a gallon of arrowhead water for a $1. i've always liked arrowhead water and it's cheap too...
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