Water is always a hot topic during the Great British Summer – usually because it’s falling from the sky. The hot temperatures this year have made it a battle to stay hydrated, including for our hard-working vendors. And we have been asking you, the readers, to help out by offering them bottled water where you can.
But Sir David Attenborough’s eye-opening Blue Planet II has started to turn the tide against plastic. The 2017 BBC series inspired the Environmental Audit Committee to set up a two-year investigation into how to cut the down the 38.5 million plastic bottles used every day in the UK, and ensure more than the current 15 million of them are flowing into recycling centres instead of the oceans.
More free water refill stations could be the answer to this problem – they can reduce the single-use of plastic water bottles by up to 65 per cent, according to the committee’s findings. So where to find a drink of H₂0 when you’re out and about? At the moment, only licensed businesses are required to offer a free glass of tap water under the Licensing Act 2003 in England and Wales and the Licensing (Scotland) Act 2005.
It's vital to stay hydrated during #HeatWave2018.
Thanks to the water industry backed @Refill scheme, you can fill up a re-useable bottle for free at a variety of locations across the country.
Download the app to get hydrated and cut down your #plastic usage. 💧#Working4Water pic.twitter.com/KQYOkVxd1Y
— Water UK (@WaterUK) August 7, 2018
The trickle of ideas to open up access to water – a basic human right – and cut down on the use of plastic bottles is turning into
a flood.
National campaign Refill is encouraging cafes, shops, hotels and anyone with a tap who is willing to open up to the public to advertise it with a window sticker and log it in an app.