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A Bluewater Oasis hydration station on the popular tourist island of Sandhamn, in the Baltic Sea, helps save depleted ground water reserves by delivering free clean drinking water generated directly from the brackish sea.

Towards a more water wise world

Thousands of water experts, decision makers and business innovators meet this week in Stockholm, Sweden, as part of World Water Week 2017. As a thought leader in innovating residential water purification solutions that address key drinking water concerns, Bluewater says thoughtless contamination of water resources everywhere in the planet needs to be addressed.

Bluewater believes everyone should have the right to clean drinking water from their taps, something the EWG is battling for by creating its national US-wide Tap Water Database. (Photo Credit: Istock, Khosrork )

A New Database Detailing Pollutants In Virtually All U.S. Public Water Systems Is A Benchmark For Other Countries, Says Bluewater

Bluewater, an innovator of advanced residential water purification technologies, has praised the initiative by the U.S. Environmental Working Group to publish a new national Tap Water Database enabling Americans to discover what potentially harmful chemicals could be their drinking water. Bluewater said the EWG project sets a benchmark for similar initiatives in other parts of the world.

The Bluewater Oasis hydration station pumps water directly from the Baltic Sea and turns it into on-demand fresh drinking water, delivering up to 5.7 liters per minute.

Saving A Baltic Sea Island Paradise From Its Own Popularity

A popular Swedish Baltic Sea island and yachting mecca is being helped to tackle fast shrinking ground water reserves and marine pollution by a unique public hydration station that turns sea water into great tasting on-demand drinking water.

Serving purified chilled still and fizzy water, the Bluewater Oasis in the America's Cup Village on Bermuda helped visitors avoid using 250,000 disposable plastic water bottles (500 ml).

Saving the planet one plastic water bottle at a time

Sweden’s Bluewater leverages its advanced water purification technologies to save the planet from a quarter-of-a-million throwaway plastic bottles on Bermuda during the four weeks of the 35th America’s Cup.

A turtle battles  through plastic marine pollution.  Soon, says the UN, there'll be more plastic than fish in the oceans. (iStock credit: canaran )

Bluewater Backs UN 's Declaration of War on Ocean Plastic

With over 8 million tonnes of plastic leaking into the ocean each year – equal to dumping a garbage truck of plastic every minute, according to the United Nations – Swedish water purification company Bluewater has made stopping the unfettered use of disposable plastic bottles a cornerstone of its business mission.

På Bermuda skapade Bluewater ett ”vattenoas” för den svenska America's Cup utmanaren Artemis Racing.

Svenska Bluewater fortsätter kampen mot miljöförstörande plastflaskor

Varje minut läggs 55 000 engångsflaskor i plast till avfallsproblemen i Amerika. Med den hastigheten uppskattar FN att år 2050 kommer haven att innehålla fler plastflaskor än fiskar. Bluewater, ledande tillverkare av vattenrenare för privat och kommersiellt bruk, arbetar för att förändra detta.

Artemis Racing's team in the Red Bull Youth America's Cup Challenge gear up for some exciting sailing

Bluewater Supports Artemis Youth Racing Team During America's Cup On Bermuda

Sweden’s Bluewater water purification company is supporting the sustainability efforts of Sweden’s America’s Cup challenger, Artemis Racing, and today announced it will increase its commitment to sailing in Sweden ans globally by supporting Artemis Youth Racing’s entry in the Red Bull Youth America’s Cup.

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