Essay Topic Hub

Bottled Water
Essays

100+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

100 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Bottled water sits at the intersection of public health, environmental policy, and consumer culture, making it a compelling subject across disciplines such as health sciences, business, environmental studies, and public policy. Students are drawn to it because it raises fundamental questions about the safety of drinking water, the role of industry in shaping public behavior, and the tension between consumer convenience and sustainability. The topic is academically interesting precisely because it challenges assumptions — tap water in many regions is rigorously tested and regulated, yet consumers continue to choose bottled alternatives at significant personal and environmental cost.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Many take a policy angle, examining whether governments should regulate or ban bottled water and how public institutions can guide consumer behavior. Others are rooted in marketing analysis, including competitive comparisons between major industry players like Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, and international market entry strategies for brands such as Voss Water. Additional papers focus on the harmful environmental and health effects of plastic bottles, corporate social responsibility practices seen in companies like Nestlé, and the broader sustainability implications of the bottled water industry.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a clearly scoped thesis — arguing a specific position on regulation, consumer behavior, or environmental impact rather than simply surveying the industry. Evidence drawn from public health data, regulatory frameworks, and marketing research tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating bottled water as purely a health issue while ignoring its economic and environmental dimensions, which weakens both the argument and the analysis.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Natural Gas Drilling a Retrospect
Natural Gas Drilling in the United States
Paper Doctorate
Marcellus Shale Is a Black
Marcellus Shale is a black fine-grained laminated formation of sediments. It extends deep underground from Ohio and West Virginia into Pennsylvania and southern New York (Paterson 2011).
Paper High School
Should Bottled Water Be Banned? Environmental and Safety Case
Why are Americans, Europeans, and other citizens around the globe buying bottled water in such enormous quantities? What is wrong with the water their communities provide? These questions are the essence of the issues…
Paper Undergraduate
Water sanitation systems and public health
¶ … water sanitation. We discuss the need for water to be safe for human consumption and the need for water in times of disasters such as floods and hurricanes such as hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
Paper High School
Electronic Health Records (EHR) --
Electronic Health Records (EHR) -- Pharmacy
Paper Masters
Nestle Analysis and Recommendations Nestle
Nestle is one of the world's leaders in the packaged food industry, with products ranging from candy to bottled water to -- due to a relatively recent acquisition from Kraft -- frozen pizzas.
Paper Undergraduate
1992, Easy Way Tea From
¶ … 1992, Easy Way Tea from Taiwan has since expanded its presence worldwide. While they remain a small scale player, relative to the greater competitors, the company does a represent noteworthy presence within the…
Essay Doctorate
Human Resources Management (HRM) Strategy at Nestle
The Nestlé Corporation as we know it today was formed in 1905, when a merger combined two preexisting companies which were originally formed in 1866. The Anglo-Swiss Milk Company was created by brothers George Page and Charles Page, while Farine Lactée Henri Nestlé was the brainchild of Henri Nestlé. By combining the assets and expertise of two established, successful companies, the newly formed Nestlé S.A. positioned itself for immediate growth within the European continent, but the advent of two World Wars within a span of four decades forced the company’s upper management to explore expansion to markets in North and South America, Asia and Africa. A series of major mergers and acquisitions followed the conclusion of WWII, and Nestlé soon expanded through its purchase of competing firms like Crosse and Blackwell (1950), Findus (1963), Stouffer’s (1973), Carnation (1984), San Pellegrino (1997), and Ralston Purina (2002). What had begun as a simple purveyor of milk chocolate and condensed milk in the 19th century had flourished into one of the world’s true multinational conglomerates, with Nestlé know holding vested interests in markets such as bottled water, pet food, makeup and cosmetics, candy bars, ice cream, breakfast cereals, and dozens of other product lines (Rapoport, 1994, p. 3).
Paper Doctorate
Blue gold: water resources and global economics
This is a three page paper about the film Blue Gold, by Sam Bozzo, and it is about water. The film is about corruption in business and government related to the privatization of the water supply. Bozzo shows that water will be the next oil, in terms of being the natural resource that will be fought over by countries. We need to take action against big business and corrupt governments so that water wars are not immanent.
Essay Doctorate
Quality Control Group Project Company Overview US
The report evaluates the US Airways using the DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve and Control) model. The company analysis reveals that the US Airways sustained a great loss of more than $1.8 billion in 2008. The attributed factors include high cost of fuel, and inefficient staff. The report suggests that the company should implement training for its staff to enhance efficiency.