Bottle Water is the New Hummer H2

bottle-water

Stop buying it now before the neighbors begin blaming you for their sunburn and the high price of gas. Great cartoon from Greenberg and the Ventura County Star.

via Ventura County Star

By Rocky Thompson

- rockythompson

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This entry was posted on THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2008 - 4:17 P.M. and is filed under Story. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

10 Responses to “Bottle Water is the New Hummer H2”

  1. bryantp Says:

    PET bottles are easily recycled. Japan recycles theirs with great success. Still, at home, I don’t use bottled water. However, when traveling, it’s difficult to get water any other way. I guess I could knock on stranger’s doors. I’ll let you know how that works out.

  2. TCWriter Says:

    PET bottles may be easily recycled, but in the US anyway, they rarely are.

    There are few occasions when you’d have access to bottled water and not some source of tap water, so carrying a nalgene bottle usually works fine. Bottled water has its uses, but it’s doesn’t have 28 billion bottles worth of uses…

  3. powstash Says:

    bryantp - c’mon. We all travel. Ever seen a drinking fountain? Guess where it comes from? Yea, same place as a tap. Get yourself a nalgene, or better yet a Klean Kanteen and cut the excuse. Until people like you and me start to get a little inconvenienced and change the status quo that is our lives little to nothing will change to help the planet.

  4. aps Says:

    Only 3 tons of CO2? I guess they aren’t including the fuel and subsequent CO2 from transporting the bottled water. 3 tons for the entire industry isn’t even worth mentioning.

  5. Bjornar Says:

    I don’t really care about the carbon angle, I just have a problem paying for something that has many sources around me that are free or very close to free. I drink it from the tap or through a filter but never from a bottle for $$$.

  6. you still buying bottled water? Says:

    […] (via The Goat) […]

  7. sam Says:

    I really like bottled water.

  8. samos Says:

    If you compare the wrapping of a chocolate bar, a chewing gum or a sandwish wrapping from a usual store by the Highway, everything is excessive, including bottled water, pop, juice, etc.

    But how many gas station, fastfood restaurant or even goverment rest areas offer a recycling bin next to their garbage can? You can say dont drink bottle water when traveling. But that’s exagerated. The fumes from your exhauts for 1km is worst and nobody says stop travelling…

    Please recycle your tapped bottle water when traveling.

  9. bryantp Says:

    Epic discussion.

    BTW, at home, I don’t use bottle water… unless I get stuck without practical options. I tried carrying the Nalgene bottles…it works well when I’m on vacation and have time. It wasn’t very convenient when I was traveling on biz and rushed.

    I don’t disagree with the premise but I wan’t to point out that I would never rent a Hummer while traveling but sometimes find few choices to bottled water. Paraphrasing an old commercial, “Don’t hate me because I’m thirsty.”

  10. jcbetter Says:

    In Ann Arbor, MI they have banned bottle water from the downtown area, due to the misuse of bottling plants around the great lakes area. I use bottled water once in awhile, but I keep the bottles and refill them or recycle them.I can see why people choose to use bottle water but we need to be more aware of it’s source.

    http://www.autobloggreen.com/2007/07/16/ann-arbor-moves-to-ban-bottled-water-sales-from-city-events/
    http://redeye.chicagotribune.com/news/custom/coverstory/red-110707-bottledwater-ban,0,2481538.story
    Read this one about the misuse of water wells and reduction of the great lakes:
    http://www.mlui.org/landwater/fullarticle.asp?fileid=16596

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