The citywide initiative aims to encourage residents and visitors to ditch their single-use plastic bottles and refill their own bottles
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Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai, launched ‘Dubai Can’, a citywide initiative to encourage residents and visitors to ditch their single-use plastic bottles and refill their own bottles from over 30 public water stations across Dubai.
Here’s all you need to know about the initiative:
The goal is to encourage people to stop using plastic water bottles and carry their own fillable bottles instead. It is part of the efforts to reduce the reliance on single-use plastic across Dubai.
Drinking water stations have been installed in major attractions across the city, including Kite Beach, Dubai World Trade Centre, Zabeel Park and Madinat Jumeirah. Around 50 more refill stations will be added across the emirate. The map of stations is available on the website www.dubaican.com
Dubai Can - Water stations available across the city to encourage ‘refill culture'. Photo: Dubai Media Office
Yes, the water stations will be provided all year long to encourage a culture of sustainability and reduce the use of plastic bottles.
The water at the public stations will be kept at a temperature of 10°C to offer people a refreshing, clean and safe alternative, while driving a ‘refill culture’.
The water you will get from a Dubai Can refill station is similar to what you would get from a typical bottle of local, branded water. The process of the water desalination removes unhealthy impurities from water at its source. Filters will also be used at the refill station for an additional degree of safety.
Yes. All water stations across the city will adhere to municipal, healthcare and federal regulations. This includes providing clean and safe drinking water, which will be tested in accordance with the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (Dewa), GCC and World Health Organization (WHO) standards.
According to the Conformity Affairs Department at the Emirates Authority for Standardisation and Metrology, tap water is safe to drink in the UAE.
The water across the UAE goes through the process of desalination, removing any impurities before it reaches your taps.
The vast majority of tap water and drinking water in Dubai is desalinated seawater from the Arabian Gulf. The rest of our water supply comes largely from underground sources or groundwater.
Dubai Can - Water stations available across the city to encourage ‘refill culture'. Photo: Dubai Media Office
Filtered tap water is safer than plastic water bottles. Installing an additional filter at home ensures the water is not affected by aging pipes or tanks.
Plastic bottles are among the items that can take up to 500 years to decompose, causing detrimental impact on the environment. Approximately 1.1 million marine creatures are killed by ocean plastic every year. If we continue the same habits, there will be more plastic than fish in the oceans by 2050, especially that 91 per cent of plastic is not recyclable.
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The average UAE resident can use around 450 plastic water bottles every year, bringing the total of plastic bottles used to four billion each year. In 2019, the UAE produced 8.3 billion tonnes of plastic.
Dubai has been leading efforts to reduce plastic consumption. Earlier last week, the emirate announced a 25 fils tariff on single-use plastic bags, with aims to ban the bags over the span of two years.
The initiative goes in line with the Dubai 2040 Urban Masterplan and supports the emirate's commitment to achieving UAE NetZero 2050 initiative.
Dubai Can - Water stations available across the city to encourage ‘refill culture'. Photo: Dubai Media Office
You save money by relying on filtered tap water, reduce waste that harms the environment and save wildlife.
Companies can register through www.dubaican.com to add a drinking station at their office as the organizers aim to instal 1,000 stations in offices, hotels, establishments, government entities and universities over the coming period.