Canadians wanting to do something about the environment can start by drinking tap water, environmentalist David Suzuki says.
I have purchased 3 stainless steel canteens to use for my water--filtered TAP water. One is for kayaking, one is for work and one is for using at the gym. I've given up spending money on bottled water not just because of the price of paying for what may be filtered tap water, but for the following reasons:
Bottled water generates up to 600 times more CO2 than tap water
Most plastic bottled water bottles are not recycled but end up in landfill Drinking a bottle of water has the same impact on the enviroment as driving a car for a kilometer
A Swedish study calculated that the environmental impact of bottled water was 90 to 1,00 times greater than tap water and could be higher
Britons use 275,000 tons of platic bottles (includes drinks other than water) each year. 15 million a day in the UK, 3 billion litres of bottled water every year. The plastic bottles left over would fill the new Wembley Stadium three times over. Imagine how much Canadians produce in plastic bottle waste.
Bottled water costs more than gasoline per litre.
And just because I like this Canadian study statistic (and I have some university but certainly am not earning a ridiculously high salary plus I live in an apartment) University-educated households were less likely to drink bottled water than households with a lower level of formal education. The lower rate of bottled water drinking among university-educated households, set against the higher rates seen in high income households, shows that behaviours associated with income are not necessarily also associated with level of education. (full article at: http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/16-002-XIE/2008002/article/10620-en.htm)