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BOTTLED WATER: BACKGROUND, HISTORY, AND ARGUMENTS.

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Presentation on theme: "BOTTLED WATER: BACKGROUND, HISTORY, AND ARGUMENTS."— Presentation transcript:

1 BOTTLED WATER: BACKGROUND, HISTORY, AND ARGUMENTS

2 Sources: https://digital.library.txstate.edu/bitstream/handle/10877/3296/fulltext.pdf?sequence=1 and http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126833795https://digital.library.txstate.edu/bitstream/handle/10877/3296/fulltext.pdf?sequence=1 http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126833795 Quick History of Bottle Water: 1845- Earliest modern bottled water company in the US  The Ricker family of Maine bottled and sold spring water- capitalizing on the spring’s supposed medicinal properties, eventually becoming the Poland Springs water company. Learning Goal: I will be able to understand the history of bottled water and recognize the tension between its convenience and the impact that can have on our state and environment

3 1905- Ozarka Spring Water Company was founded in Eureka Springs, Arkansas. 1958- International Bottled Water Association- Bottling companies formed their own lobbing group to promote their product and set standards for health

4 1976- The average American consumed a gallon and a half of bottled water each year.  Around 350 million gallons of bottled water were sold in the US (almost entirely sparking mineral water and large bottles to supply office water coolers)

5 1977- Perrier launched a $5 million marketing campaign in the United States for its imported water; as it took advantage of concerns about pollution and poor-quality tap water,

6 Between 1980 and 2006, data on beverage consumption reveals that on average, each of us is actually drinking around 36 gallons/year less tap water.  Over this same period of time, our consumption of carbonated soft drinks has grown by 17 gallons per person per year  Our consumption of bottled water has grown by 25 gallons per person per year  Our purchases of all other beverages, including milk, juices, beer, tea, coffee, and hard liquor have dropped by 6 gallons per year.

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8 By 2008, number of bottled water per person/year in the US had grown to about 30 gallons.  Americans now drink more bottled water than milk or beer  Nearly 9 billion gallons of bottled water were packaged and sold in the US and 5x this amount was sold around the world, feeding a global business of water providers, bottlers, truckers, and retailers at a cost to consumers of over a hundred billion dollars.

9 2012- Americans spent $11.8 billion dollars on bottled water The next big thing in bottled water: Boxed Water is Better Company (Grand Rapids, Michigan) uses milk carton-like boxes as an environmentally friendly alternative to plastic bottles. (24 cartons for $39.00)

10 Ethical Question(s): 1. Should companies be allowed to commercially sell bottled water knowing the impact it can have on communities and their environment? 2. Should Nestle be allowed to build a bottled water plant in Cascade Locks, Oregon?

11 Proponents: (YES! to Bottled Water) 1. Convenient  Easily transported to hand out during disasters  Portable- Easy to carry with you to consume whenever

12 2. Source of Safe, Clean Drinking Water  Not all communities have clean drinking water (ex: Flint Michigan)

13  Tap water contamination concerns- is it really pure?  Due to the fact that the water is usually bottled at its source, it can avoid the possible contamination that could result in city treatment processes (IBWA, 2006)  One of Brita's advertising campaigns claimed that a Brita filter "turns tap water into drinking water." 3. Jobs  Water is a natural resource; just timber, oil, etc.; states should be able to sell it.

14 Opponents: (NO! to Bottled Water) 1. Pollution  Plastic in Ocean- Great Pacific Garbage Patch  About 80% of the debris in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch comes from land-based activities in North America and Asia.

15  Great Garbage Patch Great Garbage Patch

16  Plastic in landfills  30 million bottles thrown away every day; they will take a thousand years to biodegrade

17  CO2 emissions (Carbon footprint bottled vs. tap)  Once purified, water is frequently sold far away from its source (23.5 billion tons/year worldwide); so must be transported, which is done entirely without pipelines, and so relies entirely on fossil fuels.

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19  Oil consumption  Millions of tons of plastic bottles are produced every year, using 1.5 million barrels of oil for the US alone.

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21 2. Right to Clean Water (Companies can’t buy it all up)  Bottled water is expensive; Tap water is clean and affordable  Citizens in the United States have access to clean water, courtesy of extensive public works programs, but if that water was bottled the cost would be roughly $16,000, compared to the $60 charge for municipal water per month.  Many brands, particularly the largest brands like Dasani and Aquafina are simply filtered tap water.  Equal Access (cultures believe that it is unethical to put a price tag on a resource everyone should have access to)

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23 3. Water is a Valuable and Limited Resource  Allowing large corporations to package water and take it out of the community will:  Make the effects of a drought more heavily felt (Nestle and San Bernardino National Forest)  Will decrease the amount of water available for farms, orchards, and fisheries

24 HW: Think about the Ethical Questions and on the pink exit slip, come up with 5 questions that you have/what information you would need to know in order to answer the ethical questions.


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