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Signs of people taking back the tap

Nestle waters from the brand Vittel, Perrier and Contrex are seen in a supermarket at company headquarters in Vevey, Switzerland.

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TEXT OF STORY

KAI RYSSDAL: Here's today's entry on the list of things affected by the recession that you wouldn't normally think about. Water, apparently, is not quite the business it used to be. This morning, Nestle reported its bottled water division saw revenues evaporate by more than 5 percent last year. Bad for that particular company. Quite possibly good for the planet, though.

From the Marketplace's Sustainability Desk, Jennifer Collins reports.


Jennifer Collins: Nestle controls about a third of the bottled water market in North America with brands like Perrier, Poland Spring and Pure Life.

Nestle Ad: Embrace the Pure Life.

In this downturn, the purest choice for some is unbottled water. Tom Pirko is president of Bevmark Consulting.

Tom Pirko: You don't have to spend $1.29 on a small bottle of water, when you can drink water for free.

Pirko says consumers who buy bottled water have been hurt by the recession. Water sales to offices have taken a hit, too. Consumer advocate Emily Wurth of Food and Water Watch says this trend takes pressure off landfills.

Emily Wurth: People are returning to the tap, or as we say they're taking back the tap, and we think that is something that's really important for our long-term water future.

She hopes consumers will keep their hands off the plastic bottle, as the economy improves.

I'm Jennifer Collins for Marketplace.

About the author

Jennifer Collins is a reporter for the Marketplace portfolio of programs. She is based in Los Angeles, where she covers media, retail, the entertainment industry and the West Coast.
Allen pugh's picture
Allen pugh - Feb 21, 2010

Thanks to those vultures and their TOXIC bottles, i now have stomach cancer.

I had never had any problems or symptoms until my company started bringing in the bottled water to replace the water fountains.

Thanks a lot! 2.5 years alive so far, the rest is still in doubt.

Lydia Chambers's picture
Lydia Chambers - Feb 20, 2010

Back2Tap, a social business promoting reusable bottles on the community level across the US, can confirm that there is a growing ground-swell of mainstream people who are willing to use reusable bottles in order to reduce their carbon footprint and save some money!

David Zetland's picture
David Zetland - Feb 20, 2010

"Nestle controls about a third of the bottled water" -- please stop being inaccurate. Nestle has one-third share of the market; it doesn't control ANYTHING -- consumers control who has share by choosing who to buy from...

David @ aguanomics