Loyola University Chicago Pledge to Think Outside the Bottle
We, the undersigned members of the Loyola community, are pledging to
abstain from purchasing or drinking bottled water for the following
reasons:
1) Bottled water is an environmental catastrophe: from the oil in the
bottles, to the pumping and transportation of the water, and the
disposal of the water bottles, 80% of which are not recycled. This creates up to 1.5 million tons of plastic waste per year according to Food and Water Watch.
2) Clean water is a human right and not a commodity to be bought and sold.
3) Around the globe, there is a need to invest in public water systems to
give access of clean water to everyone, especially as water scarcity
threatens the lives of millions of people every day.
4) Municipal tap water is more regulated than bottled water.
5) Up to 40% of bottled water, including that of Coke’s Dasani and Pepsi’s Aquafina, is sourced from public tap water.
We perceive bottled water as an environmental and social justice issue
and we choose reusable water bottles as a sustainable alternative. As a
Jesuit university on the forefront of human rights and environmental
activism, we encourage Loyola University Chicago to re-evaluate its
beverage contracts to exclude the sale of bottled water.
“There is enough water for human need, but not for human greed.”
-Ghandi
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