Bottled or Tap Water? Factors Explaining Consumption and Measures to Promote Tap Water
Publication date
2024Published in
WaterVolume / Issue
16 (20)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2073-4441ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 2073-4441Metadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.3390/w16203011
Abstract
The production and consumption of plastic bottled water have several negative environmental impacts worldwide. To identify the barriers and motivations for drinking tap and bottled water, we conducted a nationally representative questionnaire survey among 3411 respondents in the Czech Republic in 2022. People aged 18-34 are moderate consumers of bottled water and very frequent consumers of tap water. Bottled water consumption tends to be less frequent among people with a higher education, while tap water consumption is less frequent among people with lower incomes. The most important factors that explain the frequency of drinking bottled and tap water are taste perception, health concerns and habit. Health concerns about tap water and the unpleasant taste of tap water increase the consumption of bottled water. People with a strong habit of drinking tap water are less likely to consume bottled water. The constructs from the theory of planned behaviour were statistically significant. The results can guide decision-makers in promoting tap water to consumers. To encourage tap water drinking, we suggest measures to increase the availability of tap water in public places in conjunction with campaigns targeting the taste and health perception, as well as the habit, of drinking tap water.
Keywords
tap water, bottled water, consumer behaviour, theory of planned behaviour, questionnaire survey,
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/3069License
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