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Montreal mayor’s musings on bottled water ban has industry’s attention

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Montreal water bottle ban
WATCH ABOVE: Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre first took aim at banning plastic bags, now he's got water bottles in his crosshairs. Global's Tim Sargeant reports – Feb 25, 2016

MONTREAL – A passing mention by Montreal’s mayor that plastic-bottled water is next on the city’s environmental to-do list has caught the industry’s attention.

After moving to ban plastic bags by 2018, Mayor Denis Coderre hasn’t announced any firm game plan on the bottle issue.

“But the debate is important,” Coderre said recently.

“We need to have that debate on plastic.”

The Canadian Beverage Association, which represents major players such as Coca-Cola, Pepsi Co. and Nestle, has hired a lobbyist to deal with the city.

“We don’t think banning (bottled) water is a solution,” said Martin-Pierre Pelletier, suggesting a ban would only deprive residents of choice.

READ MORE: Could Montreal ban plastic water bottles?

Pelletier said the perception that people favour bottled water over the tap variety isn’t accurate, noting 91 per cent of those who drink bottled water reach for the tap at home.

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“Bottled water isn’t in competition against tap water, it’s in competition against other beverages,” he said.

The industry wants the city to favour a recycling solution, estimating it currently recovers about 70 per cent of bottles that way.

The plastic bottles are made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is completely recyclable and reused in making water bottles, Pelletier said.

“Instead of banning a product that is healthy, useful, we believe we should spend our time and efforts in building up public space recycling,” he said.

More than 80 Canadian towns and cities restrict the use of bottled water, including Montreal.

Most involve activities in municipal buildings but in Toronto it extends to parks, facilities and civic centres.

Many post-secondary institutions also do the same.

READ MORE: Canadian plastics industry, Coderre meet to discuss Montreal bag ban

In 2013, Concord, Mass., came out with a bylaw banning the sale of one-litre bottles of water or less in that community and is believed to be the first U.S. community to have done so.

In late 2014, San Francisco became the first large U.S. city to ban the sale of water bottles on city property, with some exceptions such as sporting events.

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Coderre said his contemporaries abroad are grappling with the same issues elsewhere.

“I don’t have any problem if we can address the issue of recycling the bottles,” he said.

Emma Lui, water campaigner for the Council of Canadians, said her organization oppose bottled water for many reasons.

These include the environmental impact of using, making and transporting the product as well as the impact left on communities where the bottled water comes from.

In some instances, bottled water in the only option.

Lui gives the example of remote indigenous communities where clean water isn’t available.

“We understand that some in cases, bottled water is needed,” Lui said.

“But in places where there is clean drinking water and solid waste water infrastructure, we don’t feel bottled water is needed or necessary.”

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