Public Drinking Water around the World (minus the bottle)

BYOB – bring your own bottle (for water), that is.

‘Fatherpur Sikri drinking water stand.’

Photo Courtesy INDIA a County of a Billion People blog.

‘A row of drinking water vending machines in Pattaya, Thailand. A liter of water sold (in a customer’s own bottle) for 1 baht.’

Photo Courtesy Vmenkov on Wikipeida.

‘A drinking water post in the Rohtak district of India.’

Photo Courtesy Water Supply & Sanitation Branch, Haryana.

‘This is a fountain in the Pueblo of Santa Catarina four miles away from Panajachel, Guatemala.’

Photo Courtesy hobotraveler.com blog.

‘A Mayan woman with a child at a solar water treatment fountain in Guatamala.’

Photo Courtesy Aqua Sun International.

‘Interesting photo of water cooler on the street behind the Niger Embassy in Cairo, Egypt.’

Photo Courtesy hobotraveler.com blog.

‘An Italian drinking fountain.’

Photo Courtesy travelblog.org.

‘A public drinking fountain (plug spout, open mouth) in Rome.’

Photo Courtesy Traveling Mercies blog.

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1 Comment

Filed under drinking water, india, international, outreach, photos, sustainability, technology, water availability

One Response to Public Drinking Water around the World (minus the bottle)

  1. great post!

    We need this in the United States, we are bottle-water obsessed over here, and yet the only reusable container I take with me to refill is my gas tank. How simple. How unreasonable.

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