If so, please visit and sign up with Corporate Accountability International’s campaign to keep our public water systems healthy and appropriately funded!
Take action today and support World Water Day. Thanks for all you do!… FULL POST »
If so, please visit and sign up with Corporate Accountability International’s campaign to keep our public water systems healthy and appropriately funded!
Take action today and support World Water Day. Thanks for all you do!… FULL POST »
February 12, 2012 UPDATE: Grand Canyon successfully bans bottled water effective March 2012. Yay!
Grand Canyon National Park officials came oh so close to banning on the sale of disposable water bottles, the biggest culprit when it comes to trash in the park. However, after some conversations with Coca-Cola, the plans to implement the ban fell flat. It just so happens that Coca-Cola has donated more than $13 million to the National Park Foundation.
Curious to read more about this story? Both the New York Times and Los Angeles Times have great pieces on it. Check ‘em out.
Want to do something about this bottled water business? Take Corporate Accountability International’s action and tell your Governor to think outside the bottle!

Post written by Rosa González from Green For All
Every year, enough untreated sewage escapes into our waterways to completely cover the state of Pennsylvania in sludge an inch thick. Yuck.
So what if there were a way to fix that – while putting over 1.8 million people to work and adding more than a quarter of a trillion dollars to the economy? As you’ve guessed: there is.
Green for All, in partnership with Economic Policy Institute, American Rivers, and Pacific Institute, recently released a new report: “Water Works: Rebuilding Infrastructure, Creating Jobs, Greening the Environment.” The report looks at what would happen if we invested in America’s water infrastructure – and finds that an investment of $188.4 billion spread equally over the next five years would generate $265.6 billion in economic activity and create close to 1.9 million jobs.
With the side benefit of keeping sewage out of our streams…. FULL POST »
Originally Posted by Mary Ellen Klas.
The headwaters of North Florida’s spring-fed Wacissa River has been the source of an intense local feud over whether to allow Nestle Waters North America to pump water from the spring for use in its Madison County bottling plant.
Grassroots lobbying groups mounted an educational campaign to prevent the pumping. Nestle ordered a scientific review. On Wednesday, the company backed off the proposal.
Our Creative Commons License permits you to download and share our films for free so long as you play it in its entirety for non-commercial use. And while sharing our films in full for non-commercial use is free, the production cost and hosting fees are not! Donations in any amount are always appreciated. You can make a secure, tax-deductible on-line contribution via our donation page and help keep this information free. Thanks!
Please be patient, when downloading. Our films are large files…. FULL POST »
By Margot Roosevelt:
“Annie Leonard used to spout jargon. She reveled in the sort of geek-speak that glazes your eyeballs.
Externalized costs, paradigm shifts, the precautionary principle, extended producer responsibility.
That was before she discovered cartoons.
Today the 45-year-old Berkeley activist is America’s pitchperson for a new style of environmental message. Out with boring PowerPoints and turgid reports; in with witty videos that explain complex issues in digestible terms…”
Click here to read the full story!
Excerpt from the New York Times:
CONCORD, Mass. — Henry David Thoreau was jailed here 164 years ago for refusing to pay taxes while living at Walden Pond. Now the town has Jean Hill to contend with.
Jean Hill has proposed a ban on the sale of bottled water in Concord, which will be reviewed by the state attorney general and could go into effect next January.
Mrs. Hill, an octogenarian previously best known for her blueberry jam, proposed banning the sale of bottled water here at a town meeting this spring. Voters approved, with the intent of making Concord the first town in the nation to strip Aquafina, Poland Spring and the like from its stores.
In orchestrating an outright ban, Mrs. Hill, 82, has achieved something that powerful environmental groups have not even tried. The bottled water industry is not pleased; it has threatened to sue if the ban takes effect as planned on Jan. 1. Officials here have hinted that they might not strictly enforce it, but Mrs. Hill, who described herself as obsessed, said that would only deepen her resolve.
“I’m going to work until I drop on this,” she said. “If you believe in something, you have to persist and you have to have a thick skin.”
Read the full article HERE.
A HUGE thank you from Annie and the entire Story of Stuff Team to all of you that have watched and shared The Story of Bottled Water! We are incredibly grateful for your help and support.
Keep spreading the word and the link, storyofbottledwater.org. Let’s see how long we can stay on the charts!
Four Northeastern states have set aside or spent between $228,874 and $527,107 a year for bottled water, according to a new report released today by Corporate Accountability International. Getting States Off the Bottle surveys bottled water spending in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont and Pennsylvania – all known for their high quality tap water.
The findings come as public water systems face a $24 billion annual shortfall and during financial times in which states can ill afford to spend public dollars on a non-essential product like bottled water.
Watch The Story of Bottled Water and then visit our partner Corporate Accountability International’s site to tell your Governor: no more bottled water on my dime.
“…Lifesaving bottled water cannot be available in times of pressing need without a viable, functioning industry to produce it,” the association wrote.
But the United Nations, in a report released on Tuesday, emphasized that bottled water was not sustainable.
The report that found producing bottled water for the United States market consumed 17 million barrels of oil annually.
As of Wednesday afternoon, Ms. Leonard’s video had been viewed more than 120,000 times. The I.B.W.A.’s had received about 250 visitors…”
From the Huffington Post:
“In honor of World Water Day, this Wednesday, March 24th at 8pm EST, HuffPost Blogger Kerry Trueman will be holding a live Vokle chat with Story Of Stuff creator Annie Leonard and Elizabeth Royte, author of Bottlemania: How Water Went On Sale and Why We Bought It.
They will be talking all about the bottled water craze, the importance of water and how our most precious resource is being threatened — and they will be taking YOUR questions.
If you haven’t seen it yet, check out Annie Leonard’s blog post and newest video, The Story Of Bottled Water.”
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Dear friends,
Today is World Water Day, and to mark the occasion I’m joining with some of North America’s leading environmental groups to release the latest Story of Stuff Project short film: The Story of Bottled Water.
Like The Story of Stuff, this new film uses simple words and images to explain a complex problem, in this case manufactured demand: how you get people to think they need to spend money on something they don’t actually need or already have…. FULL POST »