27/02/2012 By Peter Brooks
The market trends in the UK show a continual movement towards plumbed in water coolers over bottled. Given the market share approaching parity we thought it high time to give you an honest and objective breakdown of the advantages and disadvantages of both bottled and plumbed in water coolers.
We’ll continue now by looking at water quality and environmental impact, both important factors when deciding what to opt for.
Water Quality
At Office Water Coolers all our plumbed in coolers are fitted with filers which remove tastes, contaminants and impurities from the mains supply and, providing you change the filters when required, will supply year round pure chilled drinking water.
With some of the safest drinking water in the world it’s unsurprising how developed the UK market has become for plumbed in water coolers. Infact water sourced and filtered from the mains can actually be purer than the mineral or spring water from a bottled cooler as there are less opportunities for bacteria to form.
Environmental Impact
At Office Water Coolers we offer a used cup collection service which contributes towards our carbon neutral status. Carbon Clear, our current offsetting partner, has invested money in Biomass Cogeneration in Sau Paulo, Brazil.
The bottled water industry does recycle its bottles as well, with a typical 19 litre polycarbonate plastic container being returned for refilling some 50 times before it is eventually recycled.
But all that transporting of water bottles, both full and empty, to and from businesses, equates to a lot of CO2 emissions in the form of vehicles exhausts. The carbon footprint for a litre of bottled water is approximately 120g compared to only 0.3g for a litre of mains water. This difference is quite enormous and despite offsetting the carbon it will always be more beneficial to the environment to source your water from the mains supply.
© 2012 Office Water Coolers
Consider this; recycling a single large plastic bottle (made
from PET) conserves enough energy to light a 60 watt bulb for 6 hours. The National
Association for PET Container Resources (NAPCOR) reported that in 2010 1.5
billion pounds of PET was recycled in America.
Recycled PET (rPET) can be made into all sorts of things like car parts,
playground equipment, carpet or even clothing.
Now consider this; in America (and I daresay the figures are
not that dissimilar in the UK) plastic bottles ...
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Good news for the bottled water industry as it reports a 2.8%
increase in sales in 2011 (1.8 billion litres). As an industry that employs two
thousand people it is good news in these economically trying times as the UK officially
enters a double dip recession. So with unemployment remaining high and when
people are cutting back on so much, saving their pennies, why does the bottled
water industry grow when compared to 2010.
Well it seems there are a lot of other factors at play.
UK households ...
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Flamboyant Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez, has started
announcing more price caps as part of his government’s Law of Fair Prices,
passed back in November 2011. The law was designed to limit what is seen as
excessive profiteering on 19 household goods and groceries but is now being
expanded as the government announce new prices for different products and it is
starting with bottled water and deodorant.
The books of over 16,000 companies have been examined by
the Venezuelan government so far ...
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What is polyethylene terephthalate? Well chances are you’ve
encountered it already today if you’ve swigged from a bottle of water or any of
a whole range of bottled drinks. Abbreviated to PET, polyethylene terephthalate
is probably most associated with the packaging for plastic bottles due to its
properties as an excellent and durable barrier material. The thermoplastic
polymer is part of the polyester family and can exist in both amorphous
(transparent) and as a semicrystalline polymer which ...
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