The Best Guide for the Dagenham Area

Dagenham news, reviews and local events in Dagenham areas like Goresbrook, Parsloes, Mayesbrook, and communities in Dagenham.

Charities, clubs, not4profit organisations - click to find how
What's On When?
Upcoming events 22 Nov - 22 Dec
For more events click here
Hours 4 Ours
Want to find out more?
Why not propose a local project that needs community support?
Total Time Pledged for RM9
0 hours
Who's on our Community Roll of Honour?
Have Your Say
Easy Access
View a map of Dagenham Map of Dagenham
Bookmark This Page Bookmark this page
Tell a Friend about this page Tell a Friend

Is bottled water past its sell-by date?

Published: 29th July 2008 23:37

The reasons for buying bottled water are drying up, says Which? - it's expensive, bad for the environment and many people think it doesn't taste that different from tap water.

In a recent Which? survey*, half the respondents said they can't taste the difference between bottled and tap water. In fact, 18% actually prefer the flavour of tap water.

But there's no contest when it comes to the cost of water - at 0.22p a litre**, tap is 141 times cheaper than the bestselling mineral water, Evian, which costs 31p a litre in a supermarket but is likely to cost more if bought on the high street.

Britons splashed out £1.68bn on 2.275bn litres of bottled water in 2006*** but there are signs that the UK public's thirst for bottled is drying up. Nearly a quarter of the people Which? surveyed said they are drinking less bottled water than a year ago and according to one market research agency,**** sales of bottled water dropped by 9% last year.

84 per cent of people surveyed by Which? believe tap water is better for the environment than bottled. The industry's carbon footprint is significant: the production process wastes an estimated two gallons of water for every gallon purified to put into a bottle; some bottled waters come from as far away as New Zealand, accumulating thousands of unnecessary "water miles"; and most plastic water bottles go to landfill where they can take up to 450 years to decompose.

Which? advocates the idea of installing free tap water ‘refilling stations' (similar to vending machines) in public spaces. There are plans***** to pilot 10 of these stations around London. If the idea spreads across the UK it could have a real impact on water-drinking habits.

Neil Fowler, Editor, Which?, says:

"There are plenty of good reasons for choosing tap water. You can save money, it's better for the environment and it can taste just as good - if not better. The UK has some of the safest and best quality drinking water in the world. It's time we started appreciating it."

 

What do you think?

You will need to sign in to post a comment to this article. if you do not have an AboutMyArea account, you can join now for free.

Sign in or join now to post a comment
AboutMyArea Search
Search:

Shapla Indian Restaurant
Baby Face Disco
Click to find out how to promote your organisation
Get Noticed - Advertise here! Click to read how
Crystal Carpets - Click for more info
Affordable Office Space
Teen Challenge London - offering freedom from addiction
Seedtime Projects - click here for more info
Daybreak - counselling for those affected by addiction
Tomorrows People - Making Life Work
First Aid Direct Ltd
ACBD - click to find out how you can help
Shiva Opticians
GTA Servicing & repairs
Flowers by Samantha - click here for more
NHS Donor Card - save a life
Hope Counselling
Want to Advertise here?
Back to Top
© Copyright 2005-2008 AboutMyArea

AboutMyArea Privacy Policy

RM9: Home | News | Community | Classifieds | Business Directory | Life Matters | Green Today...here tomorrow | Take A Break | Food and Drink | Out and About | Future Proof | In Touch..... | Insight | Competitions | Better Business | Timely Topics | BlogSpot | F.A.Q. | Archives | Countdown to Christmas | Contact Us
AboutMyArea: Home | Site Map | Contact AboutMyArea | Disclaimer | Franchise Opportunity