Topic: Water Bottling

The Ozarka Spring Water Company traces its roots to sacred Indian grounds and the Civil War, and was officially established in 1905. Today the...

Bottled water company sued in Indiana worker's death

The family of a woman who died after a pallet of bottled water fell on her at a Kroger store in central Indiana is suing the water bottler, arguing...

Download BevNET's 2010 Water Guide

Note: A print version of this guide was included in the August 17, 2010 issue of Beverage Spectrum Magazine. BevNET's 2010 BOTTLED WATER GUIDE...
If you've seen Annie Leonard's Story of Bottled Water or read one of our posts on the subject, you know that there is much to dislike in the...
Cherry backs tapping water bottlers to restore funding for Mich. Promise college scholarshipLt. Gov. John Cherry wants to bring back the Michigan Promise Grant scholarship for 96,000 college students by charging a fee on companies that sell bottled water
For 17 years, Della Clark has run The Enterprise Center in inner-city Philadelphia. Located in the building that was once home to Dick Clark's American Bandstand, the center is funded with both private and public dollars. Clark, a former entrepreneur who
NY water bottle deposits expected this fall, with possible push to add sugared drinksMandatory deposits on water bottles are expected to start this fall in New York, while the Paterson administration considers changes that would extend them to other bever

Bottled versus tap

House hearing reveals that producers of bottled water are only lightly regulated Debate has been raging for some time about whether bottled water is better for consumers than municipal tap water.The truth is that no one will really know until bottled ...
H2-WHOA! Australian town bans sale of bottled water, hopes rest of world will follow suitResidents of a rural Australian town hoping to protect the earth and their wallets have voted to ban the sale of bottled water, the first community in the ...

What's in that bottle? Congress says water unclear

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bottled water makers make millions off people who believe their products are purer than tap water, but consumers do not realize that they are less regulated than plain old tap water, according to a U.S. Congressional report released