7 Good Reasons to Quit Drinking Bottled Water

Please join us in being part of the bottled water solution!

by Green Diva Meg, www.care2.com

Too Many to Recycle

We had an extra Green Diva Meg in the house today! Our special guest Green Diva Meghan Van Dyk, the editor of the Daily Record’s Grassroots section was in the studio to help kick off our new weekly segment called, Gettin Local with the Green Divas: Wherever You Are! This segment is sponsored by the Daily Record’s Grassroots section and will focus on highlighting interesting stories and events within our community that help to illustrate and celebrate our community’s sustainability progress and share ideas with other communities around the country . . . or the world for that matter!

Why Should We Care

Please join us in being part of the solution! Visit our Why Should We Care Campaign page and please donate (and get some awesome goodies when you do)!

No More Water Bottles

The U.S. is the largest consumer market for bottled water in the world, followed by Mexico, China, and Brazil.In 2008, U.S. bottled water sales topped 8.6 billion gallons, which represented 28.9% of the U.S. liquid beverage market.The average

American drinks 21 gallons of bottled water per year.

Is That All You Can Carry?

According to MSNBC, the use of water bottles increased dramatically from 3.3 billion sold in 1997 to 15 billion in 2002.National Geographic estimates that 17 million gallons of crude oil is used on an annual basis to produce plastic bottles.

If you fill a water bottle ¼ of the way with oil, this is about how much oil is used to manufacture that one bottle!

This amount of oil is enough to fuel approximately a million cars for one year.It is estimated by the Container Recycling Institute and ReusableBags.com that 22 billion water bottles end up in landfills every year.

According to Environmental Working Group’s scientific study on bottled water vs. tap water, bottled water contains distinfection byproducts, fertilizer residue and pain medication . . . ahhhhh! Seriously – read this article.

The bottling companies have created a FALSE sense of NEED in the U.S. for bottled water by convincing us that our tap water is tainted and bottled water is the solution . . . NOT if you watch this awesome video by the Story of Stuff about the bottled water industry.

Good Reasons to Recycle Those Plastic Bottles

Although many plastic bottles are being recycled for good re-use as a variety of materials, National Geographic Kids states that only 1 in 6 plastic bottles makes it to the recycling bin!

Recycling plastic bottles saves energy.

According to recycling only one plastic bottle saves the same amount of energy as powering a 60-watt light bulb for six hours.Good Ideas!

Cool stuff made from RPET – RPET stands for recycled PET (Poly Ethylene Terephthalate), which is a member of the polyester family.

Get a stainless steel or glass re-usable water bottle – and use it!

Last month, the Grand Canyon National Park Service approved a plan that eliminates the sale of bottled water! There are water stations in the park to refill water bottles, which a visitor can bring in to the park.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/7-good-reasons-to-quit-drinking-bottled-water.html#ixzz1q6EcbYjw