I don’t want it adopted… well, anywhere… but in Italy they’ve set up an “interesting” situation:
Water is free. Like, everywhere. There are fountains all over the place, and you’re encouraged to just carry a bottle around to refill wherever you go. This is really nice because at least when we went there, it was really freakin’ hot.
However… they charge for the bathrooms.
Free water, all you can drink, but you gotta pay to get rid of it. I found that hilarious.
How about we provide damned fine tap water everywhere, which is cheaper yet, and doesn’t use huge amounts of unnecessary plastic?
Most people who need to carry water with them can fill a reusable bottle. There are probably some cases in which buying a bottle every time one needs that amount of water makes sense; but not anywhere near as many as have become standard.
But the thread subject isn’t specifically about Greece. It’s “Things you’ve seen abroad you wish were adopted world wide”.
Bottled water may indeed be necessary to get water to people living in disaster areas. But encouraging people who aren’t in such places to use primarily bottled water seems to me like a really bad idea.
It’s not just because you pay for it. It’s because when you use a public toilet in Germany, you are expected to clean any mess you make. A toilet brush is provided in the stall for your use, and you are meant to use it.
I doubt very much that is the case. It’s more what Doreen said. It’s because the ownership chain wants to be able to regularize the pricing labels across stores so there can be unified advertising, etc. (And the store, after all, isn’t the one who is charging the tax. It’s the governmental jurisdiction. So, to the store, it isn’t part of the store’s price.)
Maybe they should start thinking about it as the store’s price, because they’re the ones who pay it to the government, and they’re the ones who get in trouble if they don’t. Charge the same everywhere, and they make less of a profit where taxes are high. It’s not like each store’s expenses don’t vary anyway.
In much of the Caribbean, restaurants automatically serve water with your meal, bringing a one or two liter bottle to your table and opening it (so you can hear that it was sealed).
Ditto in the restaurants I’ve been in in Australia and NZ. There’s either a jug delivered to your table automatically or sometimes a iced keg of the stuff that you can walk up to and dispense your own.
Well, in the Caribbean they are specifically bringing you bottled water. The server opens the bottle so all at the table hear the”crack” as the sealed bottle is opened. Water from the tap is looked down on.
Sure, I can see the logic of that in places where the water may be of more questionable ancestry. That method of delivery wasn’t the norm in Oz (to my recollection) but the expectation that you could have still water free-gratis certainly was.
I’ll defer to our antipodean friends as to whether that is purely a tourist-area practice or if it is countrywide.
In the UK, you can always get tap-water for free but you do have to ask for it.
A free glass of water used to be automatic at a restaurant meal in much of the USA; and can still be requested IME even at places that no longer automatically bring it. But it was tap water; and still generally is unless a particular kind of bottled water is specified, in which case it’ll be charged for.
Most places, the tap water tastes better to me than anything I’ve ever had bottled. (There are some exceptions.)
Although it’s not something I’ve seen abroad, I do wish serving water only upon request was adopted worldwide - I often don’t want water if I’m ordering something else to drink and it just gets wasted.
As I remember restaurants in the US stopped giving out glasses of water as some sort of water-saving thing, though it’s completely idiotic, as the amount of water saved is trivial.
This is my memory, also (that it was to save water), and the logic was that it’s not just the water contained in the class, but also the water (and labor) to wash the unused glass before serving the next customer.
I’m guessing whether it’s idiotic depends on when and why - I know that restaurants in NYC were prohibited from just serving water automatically for a time starting around 1989 or 1990 and it was because of a drought. How valuable it was in saving water itself and how valuable it was in making people think about water use, I couldn’t say. But it would have been kind of stupid to have restaurants automatically serving water when people weren’t allowed to water lawns or wash cars.