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Bottled Water Scam

Lesbian Hunter

Throw Me to the Lesbians
Aug 17, 2006
474
4
0
Victoria
Aquafina labels to spell out source - tap water

NEW YORK (Reuters)-- PepsiCo Inc. will spell out that its Aquafina bottled water is made with tap water, a concession to the growing environmental and political opposition to the bottled water industry. According to Corporate Accountability International, a U.S. watchdog group, the world's No. 2 beverage company will include the words "Public Water Source" on Aquafina labels.

"If this helps clarify the fact that the water originates from public sources, then it's a reasonable thing to do," said Michelle Naughton, a Pepsi-Cola North America spokeswoman.

Pepsi Chief Executive Indra Nooyi told Reuters earlier this week the company was considering such a move.

Pepsi's Aquafina and Coca-Cola Co's Dasani are both made from purified water sourced from public reservoirs, as opposed to Danone's Evian or Nestle's Poland Spring, so-called "spring waters," shipped from specific locations the companies say have notably clean water.

Coca-Cola Co. told Reuters it will start posting online information about the quality control testing it performs on Dasani by the end of summer or early fall.

"Concerns about the bottled-water industry, and increasing corporate control of water, are growing across the country," said Gigi Kellett, director of the "Think Outside the Bottle" campaign, which aims to encourage people to drink tap water.

San Francisco's mayor banned city employees from using city funds to buy bottled water when tap water is available. Ann Arbor, Michigan passed a resolution banning commercially bottled water at city events and Salt Lake City, Utah asked department heads to eliminate bottled water.

Critics charge the bottled water industry adds plastic to landfills, uses too much energy by producing and shipping bottles across the world and undermines confidence in the safety and cleanliness of public water supplies, all while much of the world's population is without access to clean water.

But industry observers said such opposition is unlikely to drain U.S. sales of bottled water, which reached 2.6 billion cases in 2006, according to Beverage Digest. The industry newsletter estimated that U.S. consumers spent about $15 billion on bottled water last year. "Consumers have an affection for bottled water. It's not an issue of taste or health, it's about convenience," the newsletter's publisher, John Sicher, said. "Try walking up (New York City's) Third Avenue on a hot day and getting a glass of tap water."

Dave Kolpak, a portfolio manager at Victory Capital Management, said the environmental objections will have little impact on the bottom line for either Pepsi or Coke, though he admitted it could slow the market's growth rate.

"Pepsi and Coke do not make a lot of profit" on bottled water, said Kolpak, adding that people may talk about the issue, but will likely continue buying some bottled water. Victory Capital owns about 3 million shares of PepsiCo among its $62 billion under management.

Copyright 2007 Reuters
 

twoblues

New member
Apr 25, 2006
816
2
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North Vancouver
Not really a scam if you think about it. Where do you think the water was coming from? Such large quantities? Some little mineral spring up in the mountains? Glaciers? Well, yah, sort of...because all those drain into the reservoirs.

I buy bottled water because I work and live in old buildings where the water coming out of the tap has been through some nasty old pipes. Plus, it's easier to carry around than a glass full of water.

I never bought bottled water for the sake of purity, rather for convenience. Most bottles don't say "from tap water", but they do say things such as "remineralized", etc...

These companies do pay for the water through water metering services, so it's not that they are living off of the public's teat.
 

Bartdude

New member
Jul 5, 2006
1,251
5
0
Calgary
You're paying about a cent for the water, and $1.50 for the bottle and convenience.
 

Bartdude

New member
Jul 5, 2006
1,251
5
0
Calgary
Try buying a bottle of water at an MLB game. More like 3 or 4 dollars. And, fountains are right next to the concessions.
In that case, you're paying one cent for the water, $1.50 for the bottle and convenience, and $3.00 for some steroid popping loser like Barry Bonds :D
 

littlejimbigher

New member
Jun 21, 2006
1,438
4
0
surrey
If God intended us to drink water she should never of invented beer.
 

SFMIKE

New member
Jul 3, 2004
2,915
7
0
63
San Francisco Bay Area
Much better for you than pop....I don't really see what the problem is? Are you gonna drink pop and fire back all that sugar because you perceive it to be a better deal than pop ??? I doubt it!! Keep suckin back the water people its good for you and if you can't afford it head to your nearest tap....it's free there!
Free is a very good price.
 

visiting

Active member
Oct 23, 2005
997
1
38
right behind you!
These companies do pay for the water through water metering services, so it's not that they are living off of the public's teat.
Not sure your correct on this. Water is not metered in every city in Canada. There was actually a debate about this very subject a few years ago, that some cities who did not have meters wanted to pass special laws in case a company set up in their town, this would cause an increase in demand to process water, and since it was for profit they wanted to be able to charge a special fee to these companies, so the increased cost of operations of the town water would not be spread among the population, in fact also reducing the companies expenses. Sorry not sure what the result was, but I am sure it is most likely still be studied somewhere.......


I can't remember which brand of water but when I was in the US on a recent trip, I was at the airport with time to kill, so I started reading the labels to see if I could find the source of water, one brand was clearly marked Dallas City Tap Water. Ok I laughed, they wanted 4$ USD for a bottle.....
 

georgebushmoron

jus call me MR. President
Mar 25, 2003
3,126
2
0
56
Seattle
If God intended us to drink water she should never of invented beer.
God has no gender. Gender was created.


Anyway, I always thought it was highly implausible that bottled water came from mineral springs and glaciers. The bottling companies, even Coca Cola, would not spend the enormous resources required to mine and transport such water only to sell it for about $2/bottle.
 

Buntoss

New member
May 17, 2004
125
0
0
Most commonly bottled water is nothing more than tap water. It may get filtered again and ionized, but nothing more.

It's just like those jugs of water that people buy for their water coolers. It's nothing more than tap water. You're just paying for a false sense of security.

When you were a kid, did you ever drink water from your garden hose? Did you ever get sick? There's nothing wrong with the tap water in the lower mainland.
 

twoblues

New member
Apr 25, 2006
816
2
0
North Vancouver
When you were a kid, did you ever drink water from your garden hose? Did you ever get sick? There's nothing wrong with the tap water in the lower mainland.
Yah, but I'm talking about working in an old Yaletown building where the tap water tastes metallic. That can't be good for you. You may not notice any illness immediately, but, over time, that can't be good for you.
 
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