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Australian town bans bottled water sales

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  • Okinawamike at 08:05 AM JST - 10th July

    "What if the tap water in your town tastes bad"?

    Drink more beer!

  • timorborder at 09:13 AM JST - 10th July

    Bundanoon is a really nice part of the world. Went there a couple of times back in the '70s as a kid. These days, however, I have heard it has become a bit of yuppie retreat.

  • Tosaken at 09:21 AM JST - 10th July

    Drinking water? What a disgusting thing to do, wash in it yes, but drink the stuff? Never.

    By the way, 356 ( minus 2 ) out of 2500, now that’s not what I would call democracy.

  • cooeecobber at 09:22 AM JST - 10th July

    It's good to see grass-roots democracy at work.

    They must be communists!

  • Triumvere at 09:36 AM JST - 10th July

    Tap water in some locations is undrinkable. You can get around the flouride problem with flouride tablets. (Well water, on the other hand can be just fine.)

    I'm not buying the "bottled water is just tap water in a bottle" line. I can taste the difference. If you can't, well, good for you. And the whole bottled water is evil thing is asinine.

  • smithinjapan at 10:23 AM JST - 10th July

    Sounds more like pressure from utilities companies than anything else. The demand for tap water, especially in a hot summer country (now it's winter, I know) will increase exponentially with such bans, and water bills will rise.

  • cow76 at 10:28 AM JST - 10th July

    A 600 ml plastic bottle takes 200 ml of oil to make. That's a lot of oil. Nice work, this town.
    ** By the way, 356 ( minus 2 ) out of 2500, now that’s not what I would call democracy.** This makes little sense. It's like saying Obama shouldn't be Prez because lots of people were too lazy to vote and he got less than half the possible votes. If you don't turn out to meetings or vote, don't whine about it, it's your choice.

  • TheQuestion at 12:26 PM JST - 10th July

    A 600 ml plastic bottle takes 200 ml of oil to make. That's a lot of oil.

    True, however a lot of plastic makers are switching over to corn based plastics. It functions the same way but we can produce a neigh infinate ammount of it and it degrades much faster than conventional plastic.

  • skipthesong at 12:31 PM JST - 10th July

    man, Japan uses way too many PeT bottles. I bought a really good filter and have been using the same water bottles for a long time. I started this mainly for economic reasons as I drink a lot of water through out the day. This office alone probably goes through more of these bottles a day than this little town does in a year.

    smith, without giving any details, you do know you can clean rain water, even in Tokyo, with special filters and storage units, but at the moment, we only have industrial types. There are ways to harvest the rain water, clean it and you'll get some clean water to drink and with the amount of rain we have in Tokyo, you can save a lot. Also, if any of of you use those dehumidifiers in your house, a typical summer day can produce a lot in Tokyo house, you do know you can use that water on your bodies and as well as your laundry!

  • nandakandamanda at 12:40 PM JST - 10th July

    We have been using the same plastic bottles over and over. It means a trip to the magic source every so often, but I am quite happy. Use it for making ice, making coffee and tea and for cooking, etc.

  • SushiSake3 at 03:47 PM JST - 10th July

    smithinJapan - "Sounds more like pressure from utilities companies than anything else. The demand for tap water, especially in a hot summer country (now it's winter, I know) will increase exponentially with such bans, and water bills will rise."

    I'm not so sure. Did you catch that news a couple of months back about the tap water in ..was it LA? It was tested and found to contain a cocktail of chemicals and pharmaceutical drugs that people had been flushing down the toilet and that had been recyclled by state utilities into drinking water.

  • SushiSake3 at 03:49 PM JST - 10th July

    skipthesong - "smith, without giving any details, you do know you can clean rain water, even in Tokyo, with special filters and storage units. There are ways to harvest the rain water, clean it and you'll get some clean water to drink and with the amount of rain we have in Tokyo, you can save a lot. Also, if any of of you use those dehumidifiers in your house, a typical summer day can produce a lot in Tokyo house, you do know you can use that water on your bodies and as well as your laundry!"

    Can you provide some details, esp. about rain water harvesters and filters. I am looking around for this stuff right now.

    Any links would be apreciated.

    Thanks in advance.

  • skipthesong at 06:18 PM JST - 10th July

    sushi,

    look, I'll give you this for now http://www.bio-expo.jp/english/

    If you are in Tokyo, you got a lot of problems. The same is with Solar products too.

  • SushiSake3 at 07:22 PM JST - 10th July

    Thanks Skip, much appreciated. :-)

  • skipthesong at 07:58 PM JST - 10th July

    sushi, Japan, I am finding is a rough place for things like this. You can't just put up a solar panel or even a water harvesting system on your own property without having to pay certain fees to you local city office not to mention the wait you have to go through. Don't get the proper paperwork in place, and you are looking at heavy fines. I know first hand....

    Oz is a much better place in this area. West Oz is so far ahead.. too bad I missed that boat.

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