Dicaprio’s 11th hour preview – pretty nice short summary, though American political focus, of course. But it’s hard on the problem and strong on the hope.
http://www.bioneers.org/node/2415
Movie revue anyone? Just use the comments.
Dicaprio’s 11th hour preview – pretty nice short summary, though American political focus, of course. But it’s hard on the problem and strong on the hope.
http://www.bioneers.org/node/2415
There are very few car thefts in Peachtree City, Ga. There are, however, more than a few cart thefts. This planned town 25 miles south of Atlanta has 90 miles of golf-cart paths and 9,000 registered carts, one for every four of its 36,000 residents. About two-thirds of the households own at least one. Kids drive them to school (no driver’s license is required for a cart). Seniors who’ve given up their cars drive their carts to the doctor and to go shopping. And of the 80 motor vehicles reported stolen last year, 72 were golf carts, which sell new from about $5,000 at the three Peachtree City cart-sales shops; used carts run about $2,000.No, Ontario is not Georgia, but there are solutions.
Arlington, Virginia (April 29, 2008) — Researchers discovered a legless lizard and a tiny woodpecker along with 12 other suspected new species in Brazil’s Cerrado, one of the world’s 34 biodiversity conservation hotspots.
The Cerrado’s wooded grassland once covered an area half the size of Europe, but is now being converted to cropland and ranchland at twice the rate of the neighboring Amazon rainforest, resulting in the loss of native vegetation and unique species.
"Water is a very good servant, but it is a cruel master."
Bottled Water Litmus Test
1) Is drinking water a publicly-provided and delivered service?
Yes. In
2) Do private firms have profit-seeking priorities in the sale of bottled water?
Yes. The profits are huge in bottled water. Coke, Pepsi and Nestles make up the core of “big water”
3) Is the bottled water industry accountable to the public?
No, they are accountable to their stockholders.
4) Is bottled drinking water tested by government laboratories?
No
5) Is the drinking water “industry” compatible with municipal water?
No, the industry uses scare tactics to undermine the public’s confidence in municipal water in order to grab a larger market share while at the same time bottling the very same municipal water they question.
6) Is bottled water a form of privatization?
Yes.
So, before even examining the environmental issues, it is clear that private water does not meet OPSEU's standards.
Attack on the public and public services
- The United Church of Canada is urging its three million members across the country to avoid bottled water as a way of taking a personal stand against water privatization. "We're against the commodification, the privatization is another way to say it, of water anyway, anywhere. And bottled water that we see being sold in Canada is just an example of that.... water is a basic human right, not a commodity to be sold for profit."
- depletion of groundwater which is part of the public commons
- battles between local communities and multinationals have been growing including riots in Bolivia
- companies can draw up to 50,000 liters of water per day without any permits
Bottled Water Consumption
· Canadians consumed 1.9 billion liters of bottled water in 2005 and 2.1 billion liters in 2006
· Canadians spent $652.7 million on bottled water in 2005
· 25% of bottled water is filtered tap water
· Americans consumed 26 billion litres of bottled water in 2004.
· Worldwide consumption was 167.8 billion liters in 2005
· Every year the world spends an estimated $100 billion on extracting, altering, packaging, shipping and consuming bottled water
· “Evian” spelled backwards is “naïve”
Bottled Water Production
· Most municipal and provincial drinking water-related jobs are unionized. Most private water providers are not.
· A single water bottle uses about a quarter of its own volume in oil for production
· Every disposable water bottle is responsible for increased pollution and energy used its production and distribution
· The most commonly used plastic for making water bottles is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is derived from crude oil.
· More than 17 million barrels of oil are used annually to extract, produce & package water bottles in the US (excluding transportation), enough to fuel 100,000 cars for a whole year.
· Over half a dozen significant air pollutants are released in bottle production
· 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide are released in the US in the production of bottled water
· CO2 is them released in the transportation of bottled water – from as far away as Fiji
· Bottle production requires at least twice as much water as the bottle can hold
· a lot of water is wasted in the bottling process
Recycling
Water quality
· In 2007, William Shotyk, a Canadian scientist working at the University of Heidelberg, released a study of 132 brands of bottled water in PET bottles stored for six months, and found that significant levels of antimony, a toxic chemical used in the bottle's production, had leached into the water.
· there's empirical evidence that these plastic ingredients are now in the bodies of every citizen
· PET bottles cannot be refilled due to potential risk of leaching and bacterial growth
· Algae will build up if bottled water is left in sunlight in high heat.
· In 2004, Coca-Cola Co. recalled its entire Dasani line of bottled water from the British market after levels of bromate, a potentially harmful chemical, were found to exceed legal standards.
· A 1988 Health Canada study of bottled water kept at room temperature for 30 days showed a substantial increase in the bacterial count (Health Canada)
Price