Dazed and confused? Not me. I’m just Lost in the Cheese Aisle.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

ECO-PIDITY

“Monkeys is the craziest people.” - Lew Lehr

With all due respect to the late Mr. Lehr, I beg to differ. Monkeys may be crazy people, but they’re not nearly as nutty as people people.

Submitted for your consideration, this bottle of Fiji Water from our hotel room in Washington, D.C.:

Fiji Water

Note the tag bearing the legend “Carbon negative. Globally positive.” And lookee: there’s a bit of bragging about being a “1% for the planet member.” There’s even a picture of ol’ Momma Gaia! It’d be easy enough to assume that, by purchasing that bottle of water - why, it’s only six bucks, Madge! - you’d be doing your bit to help the Earth’s environment. Save the whales. Collect them all; win valuable prizes.

You’d be wrong.

Put aside, for the moment, the idiocy of spending Six! Fucking! Dollars! on a 750 ml bottle of water. Water, not vodka. Water, not beer, gin, or Fine Wine. Water that, if one were sufficiently desperate, one could obtain virtually free of charge from any tap, spigot, or garden hose.

Put aside, for the moment, the environmental costs of manufacturing the plastic bottle in which this precious fluid is contained. I happen to believe that plastic packaging is, in many of its applications, a reasonably cost-effective and environmentally responsible option, provided there is an infrastructure that facilitates collecting empties for recycling and/or disposal for fuel value. Alas, most states lack the kind of deposit laws that help make that infrastructure effective.

No: let’s look at the monumental stupidity of taking water from Fiji, way off in the South Pacific; bottling it; and shipping it halfway around the planet, with the concomitant expenditure in bunker fuel and generation of carbon dioxide. I’m not overly concerned about the carbon dioxide - one major volcanic eruption can spew more CO2 than the entire output of the industrial West over the last century or two - but I don’t like precious petroleum pissed away for no good reason. And shipping water from the antipodes in order to satisfy the thirst of urban hipsters is - to me, anyway - no good reason.

I’m a believer in the free market and all of its various idiotic implications - reality TV, Pop-Tarts, and ads for litigators being only a few examples. If people want to spend their hard-earned money on bottled water, that’s their choice to make.  But don’t insult my intelligence by claiming that Fiji Water is somehow good for the environment. I call bullshit, Mr. Bottledwaterdrinkypants!

5 comments:

og said...

being 'green" has never been about actually doing the right thing, it's been about feeling like you're doing the right thing.

As a hardcore conservationist- that is, as someone who believes that the natural resources of the planet have been given to us to husband by the Creator, I can only say, the mess the ecotards are leaving will take us millenia to clean up. Fools.

floribunda said...

does Fiji water actually come from Fiji?

floribunda said...

holy cow -- it does! How stupid is that? But maybe no more stupid than Perrier...

Anonymous said...

I notice that six dollars will be added to your hotel bill when it is consumed. What do you suppose the hotel might say if you told them you had packed all the water bottles in your bag upon departure but should not be charged because none of the water had been consumed?

Environmentally friendly, inexpensive and might teach them a thing or two about how words have meaning.

anonymous said...

The $6 cost is a convenience charge. Water is basically free, you pay for the convenience of having quality tasting water in a portable mostly spillproof receptacle at a moments notice on impulse.