Bottling
Water from Drought Stricken Areas
From: Leon Kaye, Triple Pundit, More from this Affiliate
While companies such as Nestlé insist they are taking
responsibility for water stewardship and recycling, they also bottle their
water at dubious sources, including those in drought stricken regions.
In fact, much of the bottled water produced in the U.S. comes from
areas affected by drought. As an article recently posted on Mother Jones
illustrates, four of the most popular bottled water brands—Aquafina, Dasani,
Arrowhead and Crystal Geyser—come largely from California.
Part of the problem is regulation, or lack of it. While most
states monitor and restrict groundwater use to ensure they are not depleted,
California lacks any such laws.
The state's legislature is finally starting to address this
oversight, but even if the legislation in current form is passed, the state
will long be in danger if the current drought conditions do not improve.
Agencies in charge of groundwater basins will not have to issue sustainability
plans until 2020, and those plans would not have to be fully implemented until
2040, according to the Washington Post.
Over half of the bottled water churned in California and ending up
in PET bottles is groundwater, through the bottling companies prefer the more
exotic term, "spring water."
Whether it is spring water, groundwater, or water coming from
other municipal supplies, the point is that the state could be using this water
for far better use than allowing the beverage companies to bottle it and mark
it up to sell it at obscene profit margins.
Despite the bottling industry's bizarre claims that bottled water
production is "ironically" low compared to that of processing other
beverages, it still takes almost 1.7 liters of water to produce a liter of
bottled water.
Continue reading at ENN affiliate, Triple Pundit.
Water bottle image via Shutterstock.