I am pretty sure that all the independents posting here would cringe reading the article below. Its pretty interesting that apparently this is Corporate policy out of Seattle, I am sure some of the Starbucks barista who are on bx could confirm i this is true or not. Cutting back on this practice might just be a gesture not only towards saving a great deal of water, but also showing some real concern about environmental sustainability :(
Starbucks attacked over water waste
By VICKY CRAN - The Press | Wednesday, 08 October 2008
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DIPPER WELL: The tap left running at a Christchurch Starbucks outlet.
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AdvertisementStarbucks outlets in New Zealand could fill more than 230 Centennial Pools with the amount of clean drinking water they let go down the drain every year.
The coffee company has a small tap under the bench known as the "dipper well" that runs constantly during business hours in each of its 15,700 outlets worldwide.
Calculated from a flow rate of 10 litres of water a minute, an average figure according to the Christchurch City Council's Waterwise website, each of the dipper wells in the 43 New Zealand outlets uses 7200 litres a day. That equates to nearly 113 million litres a year throughout New Zealand.
When approached yesterday, Starbucks said it was "very conscious" of waste and would explore whether to reconsider the practice.
The city council was shocked at drinking water going down the drain when informed by The Press and promised to follow it up. Operations and maintenance manager Mike Bourke said it was a "terrible waste of water".
His staff looked at water-consumption rates around the city and targeted the top 20 per cent of users.
In rare circumstances the council could impose restrictions.
Environment Canterbury councillor David Sutherland was stunned. "Public awareness is growing around how precious our water is, particularly in Christchurch."
He said he could not see consumers supporting the practice once they had been made aware of it.
Starbucks New Zealand general manager Paul Wood said the constant stream of water was needed to get rid of all food residue and was a health and safety procedure issued to all outlets from head office in Seattle.
Cathedral Square Starbucks assistant manager Joel Moore said all staff knew that the tap must not be turned off.
"The milk foam would build up if the utensils sat in the water all day, so the tap has to be left on," he said.
A spokesman at a Christchurch coffee company said: "It's the first time I've heard of it. It is definitely not standard practice in the industry." Staff at his outlets rinsed utensils in an approved food-based rinsing agent, not under a running tap.
Wood said the public exposure of the practice was "a wake-up call". "This has highlighted the opportunity to look at how to reduce our overall water use and to reduce our environmental footprint, particularly in New Zealand," he said.
Flow from the taps in the dipping wells were kept to a minimum and constantly monitored, he said.
The company was constantly re-evaluating procedures.
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