Posts Tagged With: environmentalism

Must See Movie: Tapped

This movie was shown at Radford University a few days ago, but sadly I was unable to make it. :( Lucky for me though, it’s available for free on hulu! Don’t you love that? So…after reading this, or before…go watch it! You’ll be glad you did!

Tapped starts out talking about Nestle extracting water from a small town in Maine and what that’s doing to their local water supply and ecosystem. I had no idea, that there is truly no regulation on extracting underground water. Basically, you go in and take it and you don’t really have to answer to anyone. Which is the main reason the citizens are upset (well, that and the fact they’re stealing their drinking water), they got absolutely no say so in whether or not the company was allowed in.

I don’t know if most people know, but the majority of bottled water, is actually not from springs or natural sources, it’s from “municipal sources” aka Tap Water. That’s right, that yummy bottle of Dasani you’re drinking right now, tap water. Except you paid 19 times what tap water actually cost. In fact, a bottle of water cost the company about 1-2 cent to produce. You paid, what $1.50 or so for that? Yeah, no mark up there.

The other thing most people don’t realize is no one really monitors the bottled water industry. They’re self-regulated. Which means they do all their own testing, and don’t really have to show the reports to anyone. They may test every day or two, whereas municipal water sources are highly regulated and test their water many times a day to ensure it’s safety. In most cases, tap water is actually safer for you than bottled water. Making you re-think that bottle of water right now, huh?

How many of these are YOU responsible for?

Not only is the safety of the bottle water addressed, along with environmental concerns, but also the ethics of the 3 big bottled water companies. Nestle, Coke and Pepsi. Remember a few years ago when we were in a really severe drought so there were mandatory conservation measures put in place? You couldn’t water your lawn or wash your car? Well guess what? The big 3, were still bottling water from municipal sources. So, while you couldn’t use water, it was perfectly okay for them too? Even when lake levels were massively low from drought, they just kept pumping away.

Part of the other obvious problem with bottled water is…well the bottle. First off the bottles leach dangerous chemicals that have been found to cause cancer, diabetes and obesity. So while you’re drinking water to lose weight, it could actually be causing you to gain weight. The other problem with the bottles are the fact that they are using oil in refineries to make the plastic. (Sounds healthy, huh?) It’s especially scary for the residents who live near these refineries that experience major health problems from the fumes and chemicals these oil companies are pumping in the air.

I felt especially bad for a Corpus Christi, TX resident that the movie interviewed. He was explaining that there are battles you fight to win, and then other battles you start that you know you’re going to lose. So he chooses not to fight. That pains me. No, chances are he won’t win, but maybe that lost battle will help us win the war on oil and bottled water companies.

Another issue with the bottles is, well, they have to end up somewhere…and normally that’s not in the recycling bin. The world rate of recycling bottled water containers is 50%. Doesn’t sound all too shabby, huh? Well, sadly in the US that rate is only 20%. That’s right, we’re such a huge world power, rich and can afford to pay 19 times the price of water, yet, we don’t recycle? Aren’t we just spoiled brats that squander away what’s given to us? There are a few solutions to this problem. Several states require deposits on water bottles, and those states with a 5 cent deposit see a recycling rate of 70%! Raise that deposit to 10 cent and it goes up to 97%! Sadly only a handful of states have bottle deposits. Why? Because manufacturers fight tooth and nail to not have to do deposits. They see it as an encroachment on their profit, which as we’ve already seen is astronomical so a few lost pennies really shouldn’t be such a big deal, right? The bottled water companies do “encourage recycling” but they want people to use curbside recycling. Which, usually is funded by tax payers, so the company gets to look good without spending a penny. As a wrote in another post about curbside recycling, there’s several problems with that. The main one being that 50% of Americans don’t have access to curbside recycling. Yep, 50%!

Where are your water bottles ending up?

Sadly most plastic bottles actually end up in our world’s oceans. These are very fragile ecosystems that support a huge majority of the earth’s life. And sadly we’re losing them because of bottled water. Do you remember learning about plankton in school? Those super little tiny organisms that are feed on by whales? And we’re taught how numerous they are? Well, right now in certain parts of the oceans, there is actually more plastic than plankton. How’s that for scary?

I only had one major issue in this film. They kept blaming the bottled water companies. Yes, they need to be blamed, but 99% of the blame needs to be laid on consumers. If you don’t buy it, they won’t produce it. They produce it because it’s huge profits and people pay it. From a business stand point, it’s genius!

The movie does also make the point that in some situations bottled water is a much needed necessity. Natural disasters, third world countries where clean water isn’t available.  But in normal, every day American activity it should  really have no place.

Categories: Reviews, Movies | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Town of Christiansburg Needs to Step It Up

So when I lived in Chesapeake I was very excited when they introduced the new huge blue recycling bins. They were as large as our residential trash cans. Awesome! Finally we could recycle as much as we wanted and have the town pick it up from our curbside. Sadly…I moved to Christiansburg where apparently they don’t find recycling to be important.

Shouldn't that recycling bin be bigger than a trash can?

First off the town doesn’t offer a curbside recycling, but there is a company that does recycling for them. So you can order your free blue bin from Valley Curbside Recycling. Great, I think…well kinda. These bins are super small and hold maybe the equivalent of 2 paper grocery bags worth of stuff…compared to most peoples trash cans which holds about 10-20 times that. What message are we sending people? What if that recycling bin was 10-20 times the trash cans? Then maybe would it help feed people the idea that they can recycle a lot more stuff than they can’t? What makes this even more frustrating…as I log onto Valley curbside, is although the blue bin is free, you subscribe to the service. Okay, can’t be too much, right? Well actually it’s $150 a year. Maybe not a huge amount when you break it down to a little less than .50 cent a day, but, for that amount it’s much easier to just take it to the recycling center myself. And what’s even worse, is how many people in this zip code that can not afford this “luxury”? Most of those people are the same ones who can’t drive, so there only alternative is to throw away their recyclables.

Recycling shouldn’t be a luxury. In a dream world it’d be mandatory, but at least, here in the real world it should at least be a feasible and encouraged option for everyone. In fact, while I was trying to find a good photo to go with this story, I found a blog entry over at dontblow.it that talks about LA essentially bribing it’s citizens to recycle. Essentially, they weigh your recyclables and you earn points to use toward gift cards and free items. Now that’s a cool deal! Help the world and get free stuff (which hopefully won’t just end up in the recycling bin). It’s really too bad Christiansburg can’t catch on to all the good recycling-Karma going on out there, I don’t even need gift cards, just a decent sized bin that I don’t have to pay a fortune for to have it emptied…I really think the citizens would fully support better, larger and more affordable recycling options…or am I crazy?

P.S. and yes, I did steal the photo from dontblow.it.

Categories: Environmentalism, Random, Rants | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

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