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Water

Will Bottled Water Companies Suck the Great Lakes Dry?

By Dave Dempsey, AlterNet. Posted July 6, 2009.


A loophole in a recent interstate compact leaves the door open for bottled water companies to take what they wish.
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One of the Great Lakes region's members of Congress has launched a campaign to stop any potential for commercialization of Great Lakes water.

Northern Michigan Rep. Bart Stupak, a Democrat, on June 16 introduced a resolution (H. Res. 551) that would put the nation's legislative body on record against any claims of private ownership of Great Lakes water in the wake of last year's federal approval of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact. The compact sets rules for water withdrawals and conservation and prohibits most transfers of water out of the Great Lakes watershed.

The resolution seeks to make it clear that Congress did not intend through approval of the compact to open the door to claims by private investors that they can legally take, package and sell Great Lakes water without review by the region's eight governors.

The issue has been sensitive for over a decade. In 1998, a Canadian company made a bid to sell 50 tankers of Lake Superior water per year to Asian customers. The resulting firestorm of public indignation prompted the company to cancel its plans.

The issue took on new urgency for Michigan in 2001, when state agencies gave the go-ahead to water-pumping operations by what is now Nestle Waters North America. The company is now pumping as much as 300 million gallons per day of water from two Michigan sites for bottling.

A grassroots organization, the Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation, successfully challenged the company's pumping operation in a trial court, but that ruling was overturned after state government intervened on behalf of Nestle. MCWC and Nestle are going back to a Michigan court in early July.

Stupak called the taking of water from the Great Lakes watershed for bottling alarming. He added: "Of much greater concern is a potential trade dispute between the United States and any multinational corporation or foreign government interested in diverting our water. We owe it to the people of Michigan, and the entire Great Lakes Basin, to ensure that Great Lakes Compact preserves and protects the quality and quantity of Great Lakes water."

Stupak and supporters in an emerging citizen coalition called Flow for Water: Preserving the Promise of the Great Lakes argue that the compact contains a troubling flaw. Its definition of "product" could be exploited by commercial interests, they contend, since it defines water when extracted and packaged for consumer use as exempt from the pact's prohibitions and limitations on water transfers.

And a provision enabling any of the eight Great Lakes states to apply tougher standards to small containers of packaged water (less than 20 liters in volume), they say, doesn't close the loophole. None of the states has yet sought to require commercial shipments of water out of the region to be subject to the compact's requirements for interstate consultation and approval.


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View:
Think Outside the Bottle
Posted by: envirohealth on Jul 7, 2009 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bottled water is expensive, not especially filtered, damaging to local communities and ecosystems, and puts excessive plastic into landfills.

Tap water, on the other hand, is free, healthy, and comes at the least socio-environmental cost.

The choice is clear people should Think Outside the Bottle.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Think Outside the Bottle Posted by: countingdaisies
When the government sells out to corporations, take action.
Posted by: countingdaisies on Jul 7, 2009 11:45 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Back in the day, sabotage was the only way for the people to be heard. It's about time we revived anarchy. Why are so many afraid to do something?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Holy Crap... now the cats out of the bag and I'm beginning to fear...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Jul 9, 2009 10:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...that some things have been or are being manipulated
for the greed of water bottling conglomerates!


Please allay my fears and say it ain't so...
But damn, this article comes out now?
When on Jun 13th this was reported north of the border!
Canada, U.S. will renegotiate Great Lakes water treaty

I want a revision of this treaty!
especially to see if it is truly protecting us from
the commercialization of public/international water rights?

We as public stakeholders of the Great Lakes
demand better from our politicals on both sides of the border!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

I smell bullshit
Posted by: FreeAmerica on Jul 14, 2009 5:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The company is now pumping as much as 300 million gallons per day of water from two Michigan sites for bottling."

Really? It sounds like someone made that up. I am declaring bullshit on that.

According to one local water district, http://www.sscwd.org/tips.html , "Every day in the United States, we drink about 110 million gallons of water."

300m gallons would be about ten 12oz bottles of water PER DAY for each man, woman and child in the USA.

300M gallons would take 520 days to pump at the permitted 400gpm, almost a year and a half.

300m gallons would flood a thousand acres a foot deep every day.

Based on a load capacity of 60,000 pounds and using the water weight alone ( no bottles), it would take 40,000 semi loads of bottled water PER DAY to haul this away from the plant.

The total premitted (400gpm)is 576,000 gallons, not 300,000,000 per day. That is a 520X exaggeration.

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Very good post!
Posted by: uggzhcl on Aug 5, 2009 8:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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