[Date Prev] | [Thread Prev] | [Thread Next] | [Date Next] -- [Date Index] | [Thread Index] | [blank Home]
Subject: Bottled water is actually tap water but not as good; yet consumers in West, waste their good money after plastic bottles that are actually harmful.
|
This Article was in Los Angeles times dated August 2, 2007
Patt Morrison: Bottled water suckers! You've
been paying a huge premium for the same stuff that comes out of your faucet. August 2, 2007 Some years back, during a break in the
criminal case against her, the It struck me as funny when I watched her do
it then -- Evian pretensions and tap-water realities. It's still funny now, for different reasons.
The H2O in at least one-quarter of the billions of bottles of water this country
swigs down every year comes out of the same public reservoirs that send water
to every tap from public drinking fountains to your bathroom sink. Now Aquafina, the biggest-selling bottled
water in the country, bottled by Pepsi, has been outed. The water in those
pretty, swirly-topped bottles with the pure blue mountain logo comes from the
same sources as the humble -- and cheap -- tap water in Fresno and Wichita and
Detroit and other cities that are nowhere close to pure blue mountains. Dasani water, bottled by Coca-Cola, has
already been busted for its tap-water pedigree from pristine locales such as Crystal Geyser water comes out of the same Of course, the bottlers purify already
drinkable water, but slap a filter on your spigot and yours will be purified
too. Tap water often comes from the same source
as the bottled stuff. It's cheaper than the bottled stuff. It may be safer than
the bottled stuff -- big city tap water is tested for some bacteria at least 100
times a month; the FDA requires bottlers to test just once a week. Which is why, in the words of the Economist,
the success of bottled water is "one of capitalism's greatest mysteries."
In the words of me, where's the mystery? We're suckers. We drink more bottled water than we do
coffee or milk. (Sodas are more popular, but for how long, after last week's
news that even one soft drink a day can add 50% to the risk that you'll get a
condition that's a precursor to heart disease and diabetes.) About 30 years ago, we each drank about six
quarts of bottled water a year in You can get at least 450 gallons of L.A. tap
water for the $1.35 you'd pay for 20 ounces of Aquafina. Turn that around, and 20
ounces of Would you pay $5 for a gallon of gas in a
pretty container if you could get a plain-wrap gallon for half a penny? When it
comes to water, that's pretty much what we do. And we do it in part because public water
has a worse image than Michael Vick. Public water contamination in places like If you're a Third World immigrant to the Still, I think people are getting thirsty --
for something different. After The Times pointed out that L.A. was
spending half a million bucks a year to get people to drink DWP water at the
same time it was buying the bottled stuff for some city offices, the mayor put
the kibosh on outside H2O. And how healthy can that bottle of European
spring water really be, if the best reason to drink it is to wash away the
taste from the jet-fuel pollutants that were created to get it to your table? patt.morrison@latimes.com |
[Date Prev] | [Thread Prev] | [Thread Next] | [Date Next] -- [Date Index] | [Thread Index] | [blank Home]
Powered by eList eXpress LLC