British Government Pulls Plug On Bottled Water
UK: March 10, 2008
LONDON - Bottles of water will no longer be served at British government
meetings under a "tap water only" policy announced on Thursday to protect
the environment.
Britain's top civil servant, Cabinet Secretary Gus O'Donnell, sent the order
to all government departments, saying the policy would come into effect by
the summer.
Britain has seen the stirrings of a public backlash against bottled drinking
water, with politicians and public figures saying they never order it and
newspapers calling on restaurants to stop serving it.
The Treasury has already announced that Chancellor Alistair Darling will be
sipping only tap water during the gruelling ritual of reading out his first
budget in parliament next week. Gordon Brown, his predecessor and now prime
minister, drank the bottled stuff.
"A number of departments have already stopped using bottled water for
official meetings but the proposal is to extend the 'tap water only policy'
throughout government departments," the cabinet office said in a statement.
"The government is committed to sustainable operations across its estate and
I have made this issue one of my key priorities for the civil service,"
O'Donnell said. "Today's announcement is a small part of a much bigger
programme of action in this area."
A cabinet office spokeswoman said there was no central figure for how much
bottled water would now no longer be drunk across all the departments of
Britain's government.
But as an example, caterers supplied 12,600 bottles of water for meetings at
the environment and farming ministry in 2006, before it switched to tap
water last year.
(Editing by Charles Dick)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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