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Environment

Building a Water Democracy

By Juliette Beck, AlterNet. Posted June 1, 2005.


Local water wars are erupting across California against global corporations whose agenda is to privatize and profit from turning water into a commodity.
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This week, to mark the 60th anniversary of the United Nations, San Francisco is hosting World Environment Day, a week-long series of events celebrating the theme of "Green Cities."

Created by the UN to heighten environmental awareness and encourage public action, one of the seven areas to be highlighted is water. This is a perfect opportunity to engage in one of the most important debates of our time: how to preserve water as a human right and public good -- not a commodity to buy and sell -- and how to restore and safeguard our watersheds and guarantee affordable access to clean water.

More than a billion people worldwide lack access to clean water and 6,000 children a day die of preventable water-borne diseases. This crisis is expected to worsen as the demand for fresh water continues to double every 20 years. Yet the call for immediate action to protect the right to water is not just a demand coming from developing countries such as India and Ghana but is originating from communities throughout California.

In California, a number of rural communities, particularly in the Central Valley, lack access to clean water and rely on bottled water for their daily needs. The irrigation water in this vast agricultural region is diverted from a number of imperiled watersheds, including the Bay Delta and the San Joaquin River, which runs bone-dry in some parts. Native American tribes such as the Yurok and Winnemen Wintu continue to fight for basic recognition of their rights to water for fishing and other cultural practices. And now, in the era of globalization, communities are also on the front line of fighting to protect water as a public good and an essential public trust resource.

From Felton to Stockton to McCloud, local water wars are erupting across California against global corporations whose agenda is to privatize and profit from turning water into a commodity. In each case, citizens are banding together to fight back against the private companies proposing to take over municipal water systems.

As budget crises continue to strain local governments, private companies are luring government officials with promises of cost savings and improved compliance with clean water regulations. But municipalities that embark on the path of handing their water systems over to corporate management can find themselves on a slippery slope of hidden costs and weak accountability, with tax and ratepayers usually footing the costs of broken promises.

The trend of privatized water is quickly sweeping the country in diverse ways. Most popular is the bottled water phenomenon -- a marketing gimmick that has duped consumers into believing that water parceled into little plastic bottles and priced 200 times higher than tap water is somehow chic and healthy. Bottled water, however, can ruin local water sheds, drain aquifers and generate over 20 billion plastic bottles to be added to landfills annually.

What is more, bottled water--which is often just tap water in a bottle--does not have to meet the same safety standards as public water systems. But communities are waking up to the ruse. In McCloud, near Mt. Shasta, have won the first round of a battle to keep food giant Nestle from tapping local springs for its bottled water business, which racks up more than $2.7 billion annually in sales.


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Juliette Beck is the California Director of Public Citizen's Water for All Campaign.

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Pay just to LIVE?!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jun 2, 2005 4:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What do these private mega-corporations do to people in isolated areas who cannot afford to pay for the water that used to be Nature's gift, and have no alternative? Do these companies let them die of thirst? And if so, wouldn't that be tantamount to murder?

How did we develop the subhuman mentality that would cause a person (or persons) to withhold basic sustenance from another, just for the sake of money? In most sane cultures, this would be considered a crime – but, it seems, not in ours.

I swear, if corporations ever figure out how to put meters in our noses, they'll make us all pay for the very air we breathe. And I'll bet they're working on it. . .

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» RE: Pay just to LIVE?! Posted by: Farbanti
the good, the bad and the thirsty
Posted by: lthrczz on Jun 2, 2005 6:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last year I visited south India, Kerala State in particular. There Coca Cola has bought up water rights in the eastern part of the state and bottles water that is for sale throughout southern India - and probably other areas of the country as well. The bottling plants have drawn down the water table so dramatically that many people have seen their wells run dry and now must BUY their water - from Coca Cola, of course.
Naturally, since this is a third world country none of these abuses of human dignity and need count for anything. Most of them aren't even christian (but most of Coke's shareholders are) - so who cares ; business as religion and business as usual in a corporatised new world order. Sucks, big time - but have no fear, bottom line ecology will be arriving on our doorstep some time soon - most likely clandestinely set up before the next elections. Dennis Dunnum

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Voters must agree to finance political elections
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 5, 2005 6:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe elected officials now accept as normal their duty to listen first to those who pay their election costs (lobbyists) rather than their salaries (citizens).

In my community, the issue is the construction of a liquified natural gas installation close by city beaches. The feds want it there and so have preempted local authority. The leverage on the city council is so enormous that everything is being done to cover up what is happening, despite all the regulations for public accountability.

What it amounts to is that the processes we have relied on for self-government have broken down. Voter indifference has allowed financial interests to take control.

We need to recognize our present condition as most dangerous for democracy. A good first step would be public financing of all political campaigns.

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Aguas Tunari
Posted by: brasilaron on Jun 6, 2005 2:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bechtel tried to buy Cochabamba Bolivia´s water rights, well actually they did. But then when they started charging people for water that they got from wells that they themselves had dug, the "water war" began and Cochabamba cancelled it´s contract with Bechtel for which Bechtel is suing Bolivia for breach of contract, but who breached the contract Cochabamba or Bechtel, who had tripled the rates for water in the city.? Bolivia was forced to sell its municipal water services to private companies under IMF/World Bank demands. The duplicity of America sickens me in so many ways. The IMF and World Bank are SUPPOSEDLY about development, but all they really do is force projects on poor conutries that jeopardize their very ability to fulfill the real needs of their populations; like health and education. All they do is build mega dams and highways that these countries can´t afford. And who are the contractors, yep, multi-national corporations. Fucking pricks, i believe there is a special room in hell, developed just recently, for CEOs and corporation whores. Somebody needs to assassinate them quickly before they kill all of us. I am only sort of kidding. But once we are all dead from their pollution, who will they make money off of?

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» RE: Aguas Tunari Posted by: illumina