Hyatt new policy only 1 bottle of water per room
#47
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 849
Checked in to Hyatt tonight and told new Hyatt policy is one bottle of water per day per room. Woman at desk gave us a card from Hyatt stating the policy. Called Hyatt and verified this applies to all Hyatt’s. Policy went into effect 7 days ago according to Hyatt representative. Cost to Hyatt probably less than .25 a bottle. Absolutely horrified with this new policy.
#48
Join Date: May 2015
Location: LAX, BUR
Programs: AS,AA,JB, HH Gold, Starriott Titanium Elite, Hyatt Explorist, Global Entry
Posts: 1,933
A Hyatt I recently stayed at provided no water in the room, and asked that WoH members who wanted their free water go to the front desk and show ID to get a coupon, and then go to the market and use that coupon to buy a water. They refused to give out coupons for your whole stay in advance so you had to go to the front desk every day for a new one.
#49
Staying hydrated with 6 bottles at HR Tashkent plus 2 not pictured. 8 bottles as usual and a fridge full of them in the Club Lounge. I don't expect this kind of indulgence at CONUS properties in 2 weeks time.
#52
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: BKK
Posts: 6,741
Many parts of the world do not have potable drinking water flowing from the tap. While I would prefer sanitized and recirculated glase bottles, these are not always practical or available everywhere. Single use glass bottles use far more energy to produce and recycle than PET bottles do, which of course contributes to carbon emissions.
#53
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: LAS ORD
Programs: AA Pro (mostly B6) OZ♦ (flying BR/UA), BA Silver Hyatt LT, Wynn Black, Cosmo Plat, Mlife Noir
Posts: 5,992
Don't want to go too OT, but in recent years, it's been about 30% for HPDE/PET bottles in the USA. The bigger concern to anyone claiming to care about the environment is how energy-inefficient most recycling is, not to mention the limited use for recycled plastics (it's not as if recycling plastic bottles makes plastic bottles). As others have mentioned, if Hyatt truly cared about the environment, they wouldn't be using plastic at all.
Last edited by gengar; Mar 8, 2019 at 1:56 am
#54
Suspended
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Watchlisted by the prejudiced, en route to purgatory
Programs: Just Say No to Fleecing and Blacklisting
Posts: 102,095
Many parts of the world do not have potable drinking water flowing from the tap. While I would prefer sanitized and recirculated glase bottles, these are not always practical or available everywhere. Single use glass bottles use far more energy to produce and recycle than PET bottles do, which of course contributes to carbon emissions.
The bottles of water would probably be used less by hotel guests if the glasses in the hotel rooms were more certainly known to be clean. But given the cost-cutting goals involving hotel housekeeping service, my bet is that the glasses are host to more pathogens than if housekeeping services weren’t so squeezed in the interest of cost-cutting goals.
#55
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 1,161
And what is potable drinking water from the tap for many and consumed by many without issue may not be without risk of disturbing the stomachs of many others.
The bottles of water would probably be used less by hotel guests if the glasses in the hotel rooms were more certainly known to be clean. But given the cost-cutting goals involving hotel housekeeping service, my bet is that the glasses are host to more pathogens than if housekeeping services weren’t so squeezed in the interest of cost-cutting goals.
Finally, municipal water in virtually **every** major metropolitan area in the USA, Canada, and Europe is perfectly safe. Yes, there have been some well-publicized issues (Flint) but beyond that, there are no issues with the water that will cause stomach problems in an average human. So please, stop spreading rumors and false information. Fun fact: most bottled water comes straight out of the municipal tap! Here in Texas, a major source of bottled water comes from lovely Pasadena: a community known for it's oil refineries and chemical plants. IF there is ONE place where I'd prefer to not drink the municipal water, it's probably Pasadena.... yet millions drink bottled water that originated from there.
#59
Moderator: Alaska Mileage Plan
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 12,318
If you're saying that 70% of HPDE/PET bottles are recycled, you'll need to cite a source.
The recycling rate for PET plastic bottles in the US was 28.4% in 2016, reflecting a decline of 2.4% in collection volumes, according to the latest figures from National Association for PET Container Resources (NAPCOR) and The Association of Plastic Recyclers (APR).
#60
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Osaka
Programs: Hyatt Explorist, Hilton Gold, UA
Posts: 3,158