This is french water
It's a story about a system in crisis.
We are trashing the planet.
We are trashing each other.
And we are not even having fun.
The good thing is
when we start to understand the system,
we start to see lots of places to step in
and turn these problems into solutions.
One of the problems with trying to use less stuff
is that sometimes we feel like we really need it.
What if you live in a city like, say, Cleveland
and you want a glass of water?
Are you going to take your chances and
get it from the city tap?
Or should you reach for a bottle of water
that comes from the pristine rainforests of… Fiji?
Well, Fiji brand water
thought the answer to this question was obvious.
So they built a whole ad campaign around it.
It turned out to be one of the dumbest moves
in advertising history.
You see, the city of Cleveland
didn’t like being the butt of Fiji’s jokes,
so they did some tests and guess what?
These tests showed
a glass of Fiji water is lower quality,
it loses taste tests against Cleveland tap
and costs thousands of times more.
This story is typical of what happens
when you test bottled water against tap water.
Is it cleaner?
Sometimes, sometimes not.
In many ways,
bottled water is less regulated than tap.
Is it tastier?
In taste tests across the country,
people consistently choose tap over bottled water.
These bottled water companies say
they are just meeting consumer demand.
But who would demand a less sustainable,
less tasty, way more expensive product, especially
one you can get almost free in your kitchen?
Bottled water costs
about 2000 times more than tap water.
Can you imagine paying 2000 times
the price of anything else?
How about a $10,000 sandwich?
Yet people in the US buy
more than half a billion bottles of water every week.
That’s enough to circle the globe more than 5 times.
How did this come to be?
It all goes back to how our materials economy works
and one of its key drivers which is known as
manufactured demand.
If companies want to keep growing,
they have to keep selling more and more stuff.
In the 1970s giant soft drink companies got worried
as they saw their growth projections starting to level off.
There’s only so much soda a person can drink.
Plus it wouldn’t be long before people began realizing
that soda is not that healthy and turned back to
"gasp", drinking tap water.
Well, the companies
found their next big idea in a silly designer product
that most people laughed off as a passing yuppie fad.
Water is free, people said back then,
what will they sell us next, air?
So how do you get people to buy this fringe product?
Simple. You manufacture demand.
How do you do that?
Well. Imagine
you are in charge of a bottled water company.
Since people aren’t lining up to trade
their hard earned money
for your unnecessary product,
you make them feel scared
and insecure if they don’t have it.
And that’s exactly what the bottled water industry did.
One of their first marketing tactics was
to scare people about tap water,
with ads like Fiji’s Cleveland campaign.
“When we’re done,” one top water executive said.
“tap water will be relegated to showers and washing dishes.”
Next, you hide the reality of your product
behind images of pure fantasy.
Have you ever noticed
how bottled water tries to seduce us with
pictures of mountains streams and pristine nature?
But guess where a third of all bottled water in US
actually comes from?
The tap!
Pepsi’s Aquafina and Coke’s Dasani are
two of the many brands
that are really filtered tap water,
But the pristine nature lie goes much deeper.
In a recent full page ad, Nestlé said:
“bottled water is the most environmentally responsible consumer product in the world.”
What?!
They are trashing the environment
all along the product’s life cycle.
Exactly how is that environmentally responsible?
The problems start here
with extraction and production
where oil is used to make water bottles.
Each year,
making the plastic water bottles used in the US
takes enough oil and energy to fuel a million cars.
All that energy spent to make the bottle
even more to ship it around the planet
and then we drink it in about 2 minutes?
That brings us to the big problem
at the other end of the life cycle.
Disposal.
What happens to all these bottles when we’re done?
Eighty percent end up in landfills,
where they will sit for thousands of years,
or in incinerators, where they are burned,
releasing toxic pollution.
The rest gets collected for recycling.
I was curious about where
the plastic bottles that I put in recycling bins go.
I found out that shiploads were being sent to India.
So, I went there.
I will never forget riding over a hill outside Madras
where I came face to face
with a mountain of plastic bottles from California.
Real recycling
would turn these bottles back into bottles.
But that wasn’t what was happening here.
Instead these bottles were slated to be downcycled,
which means turning them into lower quality products
that would just be chucked later.
The parts that couldn’t be downcycled
were thrown away there,
shipped all the way to India
just to be dumped in someone else’s backyard.
If bottled water companies
want to use mountains on their labels,
it would be more accurate to show
one of those mountains of plastic waste.
Scaring us, seducing us, and misleading us
these strategies are
all core parts of manufacturing demand.
Once they have manufactured all this demand,
creating a new multibillion dollar market,
they defend it by beating out the competition.
But in this case, the competition is
our basic human right to clean, safe drinking water.
Pepsi’s Vice Chairman publicly said
“The biggest enemy is tap water!”
They want us to think it’s dirty
and bottled water is the best alternative.
In many places, public water is polluted
thanks to polluting industries
like the plastic bottle industry.
And these bottled water guys are
all too happy to offer their expensive solutions,
which keeps us hooked on their product.
It is time we took back the tap.
That starts with making a personal commitment
to not buy or drink bottled water
unless the water in your community is truly unhealthy.
Yes, it takes a bit of foresight
to grab a reusable bottle on the way out,
but I think we can handle it.
Then take the next step
join a campaign that’s working for real solutions.
Like demanding investment in clean tap water for all.
In the US, tap water is underfunded by $24 billion
partly because people believe
drinking water only comes from a bottle!
Around the world,
a billion people don’t have access to clean water
right now.
Yet cities all over are spending millions of dollars
to deal with all the plastic bottles we throw out.
What if that money was spent on
improving our water systems
or better yet, preventing pollution to begin with?
There are many more things we can do
to solve this problem.
Lobby your city officials
to bring back drinking fountains.
Work to ban the purchase of bottled water
by your school, your organization or entire city.
This is a huge opportunity for millions of people
to wake up and protect our wallets,
our health and the planet.
The good news is: it’s already started.
Bottled water sales have begun to drop while
business is booming for safe refillable water bottles.
Yay!
Restaurants are proudly serving “tap”
and people are choosing to pocket
the hundreds or thousands of dollars
they would otherwise be wasting on bottled water.
Carrying bottled water is on its way to being
as cool as smoking while pregnant.
We know better now.
The bottled water industry is getting worried
because the jig is up.
We’re not buying into
their manufactured demand anymore.
We’ll choose our own demands, thank you very much,
and we’re demanding clean safe water for all.