Quantcast The Daily Illini
College Media Network


Feeling thrifty, the thirsty reach for tap water

By Tali Arbel, The Associated Press

Posted: 6/18/08 Section: Diversions
  • Print
  • Email
In this April 26, 2006 file photo, PepsiCo delivery man Nick Jones unloads Aquafina water and other Pepsi products while making a delivery in Tualatin, Ore.  With a day's worth of bottled water _ the recommended 64 ounces _ costing hundreds to thousands of dollars a year depending on the brand, more people are opting to slurp water that comes straight from the sink.
Media Credit: Don Ryan, The Associated Press
In this April 26, 2006 file photo, PepsiCo delivery man Nick Jones unloads Aquafina water and other Pepsi products while making a delivery in Tualatin, Ore. With a day's worth of bottled water _ the recommended 64 ounces _ costing hundreds to thousands of dollars a year depending on the brand, more people are opting to slurp water that comes straight from the sink.

Tap water is making a comeback.

With a day's worth of bottled water - the recommended 64 ounces - costing hundreds to thousands of dollars a year depending on the brand, more people are opting to slurp water that comes straight from the sink.

The lousy economy may be accomplishing what environmentalists have been trying to do for years - wean people off the disposable plastic bottles of water that were sold as stylish, portable, healthier and safer than water from the tap.

Heather Kennedy, 33, an office administrator from Austin, Texas, said she used to drink a lot of bottled water but now tries to drink exclusively tap water.

"I feel that (bottled water) is a rip-off," she said in an e-mail. "It is not a better or healthier product than the water that comes out of my tap. It is absurd to pay so much extra for it."

Measured in 700-milliliter bottles of Poland Spring, a daily intake of water would cost $4.41, based on prices at a CVS drugstore in New York. Or $6.36 in 20-ounce bottles of Dasani. Buy half-liters of Evian, that'll be $6.76, please. Which adds up to thousands a year.

Even a 24-pack of half-liter bottles at Costco Wholesale Corp., a bargain at $6.97, would be consumed by one person in six days. That's more than $400 a year.

But water from the tap? A little more than 0.001 cent for a day's worth of water, based on averages from an American Water Works Association survey - just about 51 cents a year.

U.S. consumers spent $16.8 billion on bottled water in 2007, according to the trade publication Beverage Digest. That's up 12 percent from the year before - but it's the slowest growth rate since the early 1990s, said editor John Sicher.
Page 1 of 3 next >

Article Tools

The Daily Illini encourages on-topic discussion through article commenting on its articles and blogs. It is our policy not to delete any comments based upon political or ideological point of view. However, we reserve the right to remove comments that are abusive, off-topic or use excessive foul language.

The posting of copyrighted material, including any and all content for which you are not the author, is illegal under Federal intellectual property laws. Such activity will not be tolerated. Comments containing copyrighted material will be removed, and continued violation of copyright law is grounds for being banned completely from commenting on DailyIllini.com.

If you feel any post meets these conditions or merits review, please e-mail our editors at meonline@dailyillini.com.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Advertisement

National College Advertising and Marketing
Privacy Policy     Article Syndication     RSS Terms of Use