Why
is bottled water waste a
concern? Here are just a few
reasons...
- Worldwide,
an estimated 2.4 million
metric tonnes of plastic are
used to bottle water each
year.
- An estimated
70,000,000 plastic water
bottles are dumped in North
American landfills every
year.
- It takes
three litres of water to
produce one litre of bottled
water.
- In 2004,
total consumption of bottled
water was estimated at 154
billion litres - that's
about 25 litres for everyone
on the planet.
Ditching
bottled water keeps Mother Earth
and your wallet green.
- Bottled
water is 240 to 10,000 times
more expensive than tap
water. Despite the cost,
almost one third of all
Canadian households
primarily drank bottled
water in 2006.
- One American
Water Filter cartridge can
effectively replace as many
as 9,000 standard 500 mL
bottles. So you can get
great-tasting water without
so much waste. Talk about
refreshing.
- The average
American Water Filter
cartridge filters 4500
litres of water a year for
about 32 cents a day. Put in
perspective, to get the same
amount of water from bottled
water would require 9,000 mL
water bottles a year - at an
average cost of a dollar a
bottle, that's $24.65 a day.
- For about
$10 each, you can purchase a
reusable bottle, saving you
hundreds of dollars a year
on bottled water.
- Hydration at
its best - carry the water
you need and reduce your
impact on the environment -
one reusable bottle can last
for decades, making it easy
to stop buying single-serve
bottled water to fulfill
your everyday hydration
needs.
Many
people drink bottled water
because they believe it to be of
a higher quality, cleaner and
better-tasting, but that's not
necessarily true.
- Two of
Canada's largest bottled
water brands use purified
municipal water taken from
cities including Vancouver,
Montreal, Brampton and
Calgary.
- If you don't
like the taste of your tap
water, try American Water Filters.
Nine out of 10 consumers
say, "Purified water tastes
better than tap water",
according to an in-home
usage study.
In Canada, the
responsibility for ensuring
drinking water supplies are safe
is shared between the
provincial, territorial, federal
and municipal governments, with
Health Canada taking a
leadership role. The City of
Toronto tests its drinking water
every four hours!
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