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hatrack

(65,149 posts)
Tue Apr 26, 2022, 07:40 AM Apr 2022

A Bottled Water Company Employing Greenwashing Isn't Surprising. Admitting That It Does Is.

In ongoing litigation over the greenwashing of plastic recycling, the bottled water company BlueTriton made a revealing argument: its claims of being environmentally friendly aren’t violations of the law, because they are “aspirational.”

EDIT

BlueTriton — which owns Poland Spring, Pure Life, Splash, Ozarka, and Arrowhead, among many other brands — is estimated to contribute hundreds of millions of pounds of plastic to U.S. landfills each year. BlueTriton used to be known as Nestlé Waters North America, which was bought by the private equity firm One Rock Capital Partners in March 2021. The company, which has a history of draining aquifers to get the water that it encases in polluting plastic, owns about a third of bottled water brands in the U.S. Yet with sleek, green — and blue — PR materials, BlueTriton markets itself as a solution to the problems of plastic waste and water.

EDIT

Several of its brands go even further, suggesting that they are helping address the plastic problem because the bottles can in principle be recycled. BlueTriton brands Poland Spring, Ozarka, and Zephyrhills Water advertise that “We use #1PET plastic, which can be used over and over again!” Pure Life water boasts that all its bottles are “100% recyclable … and can be used for new bottles and all sorts of new, reusable things.” Deer Park claims that its recyclable bottles help “keep plastic out of landfills” and that the company “care[s] about you & our planet.”

In truth, there is overwhelming evidence that recycling cannot solve the plastic problem. Since the 1950s, only 9 percent of plastic produced has been recycled, while the vast majority of plastic waste is either landfilled or incinerated. Six times more plastic waste is burned than recycled in the United States. Packaging, including the PET bottles that BlueTriton brands describe as recyclable, account for more than half the plastic that winds up in landfills. As the complaint notes, plastic pollution is now so widespread that the average person is drinking more than 1,700 tiny bits of plastic in a week’s worth of drinking water — the equivalent of an entire credit card. Microplastics are found in 94.4 percent of tap water samples in the U.S. and may be an even bigger problem in bottled water, despite bottled water companies marketing their product as pollution-free. One BlueTriton brand, Pure Life, had twice the level of plastic fibers as tap water. Meanwhile, as BlueTriton touts itself as a solution to America’s water problems, it has been caught extracting water from the national forest without authorization. The practice of tapping into natural water supplies has been shown to drain aquifers and rivers, taking water from plants and animals as well as public drinking water reserves.

EDIT

https://theintercept.com/2022/04/26/plastic-recycling-bottled-water-poland-spring/

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A Bottled Water Company Employing Greenwashing Isn't Surprising. Admitting That It Does Is. (Original Post) hatrack Apr 2022 OP
Nestle was bad enough draining aquifers, and I don't see... TreasonousBastard Apr 2022 #1
Bottled water is a puzzle to me. How many places in the country have water that Scrivener7 Apr 2022 #2

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
1. Nestle was bad enough draining aquifers, and I don't see...
Tue Apr 26, 2022, 08:01 AM
Apr 2022

private equity doing any better.

But, the real problem is us. I don't see Poland Spring driving down the highways tossing bottles out the window. Sure, we could reuse Big Gulp containers, or buy our own bottles, but how many do?

These guys are at least giving us the chance to recycle, but we're not doing it. Most stuff we buy is in plastic. Frozen food, Chinese and other take out.. All in plastic.

My town has a recycling program largely on hold because China isn't buying our waste paper now and residents claim it's too much bother to seperate bean cans and plastic, much less read the numbers on the bottom of a takeout container.

It's us. It's always us.

Scrivener7

(60,076 posts)
2. Bottled water is a puzzle to me. How many places in the country have water that
Tue Apr 26, 2022, 08:03 AM
Apr 2022

cannot be filtered and safely drunk?

(That's a real question. My tap water is good. I drink it straight. My sister's is hard. She runs it through a filter.) And if your tap water is drinkable in some form, why would you spend money on water? Why not get a really good water thermos? My thermos keeps ice water icy for 6 hours. And it's a lovely lavender color.

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