How Reusable Water Bottles Help the Environment

From the production of single-use plastic water bottles to where they inevitably end up, there’s not much going for them. Investing in a reusable water bottle helps the environment in all the ways plastic water bottles harm it.

By using fewer resources, emitting less harmful gas, and protecting water resources and the creatures who live underwater, these are all ways reusable water bottles help the environment.

Requires Less Oil To Produce

When it comes to plastic water bottles, much of the dependency on environmental resources is in the production stage.

According to Hydration Anywhere, over 17 million barrels of oil is used to create more than 50 million plastic water bottles per year in the United States. If used for another purpose, that amount of oil could fuel 1.3 million cars for an entire year or power 190,000 homes.

Far from being insignificant, the amount of oil being used just to make plastic water bottles is enough to second-guess yourself the next time you reach for a single-use bottle out of convenience.

Releases Less Carbon Dioxide into the Atmosphere

Ok, so maybe you’re not convinced that using up oil is a big deal because Elon Musk is creating fully electric cars and soon that’ll be the norm. But not only is the production of plastic water bottles using up valuable resources, but it also causes some pretty harmful emissions, too.

Biofriendly Planet reported that the creation of single-use plastic bottles releases 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year. But first, let’s have a quick science lesson to jog your memory about why carbon emissions are a bad thing for the environment.

Carbon dioxide is considered a greenhouse gas because it operates as a greenhouse. It traps heat close to Earth’s surface and without it, as NASA explains, the oceans would actually be frozen. So that’s good.

But an extreme amount of carbon dioxide being expelled into the atmosphere means we’re heating up the planet too quickly and by choosing a reusable water bottle, you’ll be helping slow down that process.

Less Likely to End Up in a Landfill

While you may toss your reusable water bottle eventually - since nothing lasts forever - your far more likely to see plastic bottles piling up in a landfill. Each taking hundreds of years to decompose, in the United States, 38 billion water bottles end up in landfills each year.

Protects Water and Marine Life

It’s also beneficial for water itself that you use a reusable water bottle. Ban the Bottle states that it actually takes more water to produce a plastic bottle than the amount put in that bottle for drinking, which is just downright bizarre.

And did you know that most bottled water comes from places with limited water supplies, to begin with? Nestle actually created a water shortage in Pakistan. What’s more is that so much of this plastic ends up polluting the oceans, killing what Biofriendly Planet estimates as 1.1 million marine creatures annually.

Overall, choosing a reusable water bottle is clearly better for the environment in countless ways. They use less oil, release less carbon dioxide, they won’t pack landfills, and they’re good for water in general. It’s a no-brainer!


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