10 million a day

a montage of plastic water bottles found in the streets of Gravesend.

I don’t know what made me first notice them. But when I did, I realised that they were everywhere. If I go for a half-hour walk from home in Gravesend, I’ll usually see three or four discarded water bottles. Don’t get me wrong, it’s great that you’re all drinking so much water; good hydration is important. But when you buy bottled water, you are driving a chain that’s having a significant impact on our environment.

Evian water bottle discarded on the streets of Gravesend,

In 2021, UK consumers drank 2.5 million litres or 10 million bottles of water per day. That’s a lot of plastic. This figure is expected to grow 15% by 2027. If those bottles end up in a landfill, and about 25% do in the UK, they will take somewhere between 400 and 1,000 years to break down.

Apart from the environmental impact of all that plastic, there is the carbon produced in trucking that water and plastic around the country. In Gravesend, Southern Water charges about a third of a penny for two litres of water. Buy the same two litres from Aldi, and you’ll pay 129 times as much. Our tap water undergoes rigorous testing, it truly is as good as bottled water.

Aqua Vale water bottle discarded on the streets of Gravesend,

Apart from the convenience there really is no upside to bottled water. It costs more, damages the environment on a global scale and litters our streets locally.

Aqua Vale water bottle discarded on the streets of Gravesend,

Reduce, Reuse, Refill: Invest in a reusable water bottle and make a long-lasting impact.

www.refill.org.uk a campaign to reduce single use packaging.

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