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Water

When it Comes to Water, Can Corporations and Community Really Coexist?

By Peter Asmus, AlterNet. Posted August 19, 2009.


The latest fight between activists and companies such as Coke and Nestle is about who really owns water -- corporations or communities.
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When drought brought a critical shortage of water to Kerala, India, anti-globalization activists placed part of the blame on Coca-Cola, which operated a plant there.

Critics contended that Coca-Cola failed to involve the local community in its plans, and the activists began building a substantial global movement against water privatization, employing the tactic of "brand-jacking" of the world's No. 1 brand -- Coke -- to make their point.

Coke's Kerala plant has since ceased operations, making it a casualty of the global pressure placed on the company. But the campaign against privatization of water resources by activist groups has only grown stronger on the campaign front.

Today, the focus is on bottled water, which critics point to as a wasteful, expensive example of water privatization -- companies taking public water, repackaging it and selling it back to us for a profit.

But the water wars have just begun. Bottled water may be today's popular target, but that battle has peaked. Now, activists are beginning to look beyond bottled water, setting their sights on much bigger objectives.

At stake, they believe, is whether water is recognized as a basic human right, or becomes simply another commodity controlled by giant corporations.

While the bottled-water controversy may have helped propel fresh water issues into the limelight internationally, the current hottest buzz phrase among water-policy-reform advocates, and a topic galvanizing the debate over privatization of water, is the wonky phrase "free prior informed consent" (FPIC).

Jonathan Kaledin, director of The Nature Conservancy's (TNC) global freshwater certification program, said: "Water has been so abundant. There has been an out-of-sight, out-of-mind attitude about it. As the risks of water shortages become more public, corporations that use a lot of water need to become more aware of the concept of FPIC."

In a nutshell, FPIC recognizes that communities have the right to self-determination. They have a right to give or withhold their consent for new production facilities that may impact local water supplies or prices.

From a legal point-of-view, FPIC is an evolving concept that is gaining wider acceptance by nongovernmental organizations, as well as a few private corporations. FPIC is now incorporated in some forms of international treaty law, especially when it comes to indigenous peoples and extractive industries such as oil and mining. What's new is that FPIC is now being applied to water.

In fall 2007, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the principle of FPIC for development projects, and momentum is building globally toward establishing FPIC as a principle of customary international law. The two key challenges for FPIC is an apparent conflict with the sovereign rights of nations to exploit their own natural resources (as they deem fit), and a lack of clarity about how to implement FPIC.

Among the key issues yet to be resolved are:

  • How is "the community" defined? Is there a strict geographical limitation to "community," and are elected officials given greater or equal status to local citizens?
  • If there is a lack of consensus within the "community," what process validates any decision-making (i.e. majority vote of local governing body; a referendum?)
  • Absent a political process, what exactly represents an adequate level of consent?

David Shilling, a water expert with the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (IRRC) argued that FPIC is quite important in order for government and companies to make deals, because it is at the community level where water impacts will be felt. He went on to say:

The community involved has to be part of that conversation. The underserved deserve a place at the table, too. And human rights -- not technical issues -- should be the focus. Otherwise, the corporation will not have a social license to operate. Unfortunately, companies and government have a hard time with this sort of thing. Need to put these issues about water into a larger context, a tangible framework to get a buy-in and to help elevate discussions to the level of community consent.

Bridge Over Troubled Water?

Nestle Waters has had its fair share of controversies over siting production plants. In Michigan, for example, private wells were allegedly impacted by withdrawals. In early July, a settlement between Nestle Waters and Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation was reached, reducing the company's per-day pumping limits, with additional restrictions during spring and summer months.

Alex McIntosh, Nestles Water's director of corporate citizenship, doesn't hold back when assessing how critics view his company's products. "Bottled water has become symbolic about the issue of who actually owns water. Is it fair for water to be priced and sold, and then shipped to us in plastic?" is the way he paraphrased how critics see his company's products. Bottled water is "literally a drop in the bucket," he said, pointing to stats that show bottled water represents a fraction of 1 percent of total water consumption.


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See more stories tagged with: water, bottled water, water privatization, right to water, free prior informed conse, fpic

Peter Asmus is an environmental writer based in Stinson Beach, Calif. He is the author of a new book, Introduction to Energy in California, published by the University of California Press. His Web site is www.peterasmus.com.

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The Rub ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Aug 20, 2009 1:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"But even if employing democratic means, any consent or decisions should not give away the human right to water or the health of the environment for future generations. How do we respect intergenerational rights?"

This is the rub and may not go far enough ...

Why should water rights be a property right at all? When the United States was founded it was thought to be a limitless bounty of land, air and water. We now know differently.

While environmental laws have limited some usages and stopped most pollution the basic legal framework for ownership of what should be "public goods" needs be written into law superseding private ownership.

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» RE: The Rub ... Posted by: richholland
» RE: The Rub ... Posted by: mmckinl
» RE: The Rub ... Posted by: pfm
» RE: The Rub ... Posted by: mmckinl
Maybe
Posted by: MIST on Aug 20, 2009 2:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Question: "Will Nestle Waters or other corporations accept 'no' for an answer?"

Not easily. Especially not when corporations are the 800 lb. gorillas in our 21st century jungle and there is profit to make... and governments to bribe. We have breathed life into these Frankenstein-like monsters. They don't go away when you merely say "no."

But watch carefully as the game is changed by dedicated community members in the near future. Keep an eye on little McCloud specifically. David felled Goliath. Nestle is not invincible.

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Nestle just got approval
Posted by: cdlepthien on Aug 20, 2009 4:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to take 200 acre feet/yr (that's about 65,000,000 gallons/yr) from a spring in an aquifer next to the Arkansas River here in Colorado. They have to replace the water that would have gone into the river so as not to impact other water rights (which they are doing by leasing water from the city of Aurora, which is nowhere near the Arkansas but which has water rights in it).

In conditions of scarcity, the water rights system that we have here at least keeps track of every drop of water. It is based on private (and public - such as municipalities) people & entities claiming water for beneficial use. Once water rights are adjudicated, they can be sold. Almost all the rivers are over-subscribed - meaning there are more claimed water rights than there is water. That means that in some years junior rights holders don't get any water after spring run-off is over. There's a problem keeping enough water in the rivers & streams to keep the eco-system going.

Water distribution systems based on an expectation of plenty of water (such as in the Great Lakes area) are going to have to adapt radically when the condition of abundance no longer exists.

By the way, I try not to buy any Nestle products - they have a terrible corporate history. I also think buying bottled water more than occasionally is unconscionable.

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» RE: Nestle just got approval Posted by: NoPCZone
What about Stewart Resnick?
Posted by: ReneT on Aug 20, 2009 4:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No mention here of Stewart Resnick who I read about on Alternet here just a few days ago:
http://www.alternet.org/story/141937/

Here's a paragraph from that: "Fiji Water wasn't the Resnicks' first foray into the water industry: Years ago, they gained control of one of the largest underground water reservoirs in the nation, the Kern Water Bank on the edge of California's Central Valley. This vast holding system -- built with public funds in 1999 to help buffer the effects of droughts -- stores water from California's aqueducts and the Kern River; it's estimated to be worth more than $180 million on the open market and has allowed the Resnicks to double their acreage of fruits and nuts since 1994, according to the Los Angeles Times."

A Financial Times article published on the 7th of August which was an interview with Jared Diamond had this to say: "“A friend of mine, a very successful businessman, bought farm acreage in the central valley of California, which is the most productive agricultural area in the US. And there happened to be 100 acres of pomegranates, about which he knew very little. So he started learning about them and discovered how healthy they are, that they are full of vitamins and full of antioxidants and that they may be a treatment for prostate cancer.”
The friend, Stewart Resnick, had the capital and commercial acumen to spread the message to the US consumer. Thus did the pomegranate boom begin, and the fruit make its way to the refrigerators of 21st-century America. The story somehow captures Diamond. We have the awe of ancient civilisations, the physical explanation of the fertile soil of ancient Mesopotamia and modern California, and the accident of his friend’s financial resources and ingenuity. In this way, all things, big and small, come to pass."

Read that whole article here and see just how hypocritical Jared Diamond when espousing the savvy business acumen of his big billionaire buddy Stewart Resnick and his wife:
Google "Jared Diamond by David Pilling" to get the article whose URL is too long to place here.

When is Matt Taibbi going to get hold of this story and bring all the sordid details to light?

And who did the Resnicks buy Fiji water from? This charming guy who is a total hypocrite:
"In a 2003 interview, Gilmour told the London Times that "the world's water is being trashed day by day." He would know: Before launching Fiji Water, he cofounded Barrick Gold, now the largest gold mining enterprise in the world, with operations in hot spots from Tanzania to Pakistan. Its mines, often in parched places like Nevada and Western Australia, use billions of gallons of water to produce gold via a toxic cyanide leaching process. Barrick's practices are so damaging that after an environmental review of the company, the Norwegian government announced last year that it would divest itself of some $200 million in Barrick stock."

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What's next, the air we breathe.....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Aug 20, 2009 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The water we drink, the air we breathe, how much is enough to satisfy the bottom line of the Oligarchy? Even as the rest of the citizens may suffer with droughts or initial scarcity issues. The reason that there are public utilities is because as a Corporation they will not act in the best interest of all, just their bottom line - this is exactly why they need rules and regulations to prevent profiteering at the expense of the consumer!

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Bottled Water Battle Has Not Peaked
Posted by: patsy6 on Aug 20, 2009 9:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article, but I disagree that the bottled water battled has peaked. We now have an entire generation of under-35 year old adults who cannot remember when bottled water was not readily available. It's as natural to them as breathing, and most would never consider drinking water from a tap or a drinking fountain. Remember the bumper sticker that says "Think globally, act locally?" Well, that works on this level as well. We must speak up whenever we see someone drinking bottled water. Not just because the corporations are taking water from the public water supply, but because the leeching bottles can be bad for our health and they do a tremendous amount of damage to the environment.

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water from the air
Posted by: the director on Aug 20, 2009 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is easy, we spend the money, don't buy any products made by these water russlers.
All the water that was, is! We can not make any new water and when we stop its march to the seas, we make it less vibrant. Water is just like girls, just wants to have fun.

http://www.sciperio.com/watertech/water-from-air.asp
An example of air conditioning technology.

When corporations think can own the water just review the water rights legislation and wars fought over water in the west.

We the people spend the money and no corporation can dispute that or change it.

The Director
Cellular Matrix Study
Body Human Project

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So, what is going to be done
Posted by: willymack on Aug 20, 2009 11:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
About insanely greedy bastards who will stop at NOTHING to acquire ever more wealth and political power?
If nothing is done, they'll have their hooks in everything worth stealing or hoarding.
Maybe we can begin with their enablers in congress and the senate.
If faced with censure or even impeachment for corruption, maybe enough of them can be turned from the Dark Side, and toward the public good.
This would effectively pull the rug out from underneath the thieves who've had it their way for so long.
Only we, the people in our millions, can get this done. If it takes a nationwide strike, so be it. We simply can't allow crooks to steal everything we hold dear, while doing nothing.

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profit locomotive gone loco
Posted by: maxsmart on Aug 20, 2009 12:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The profit motive destroys everything it touches.

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FPIC = Trojan Horse
Posted by: Davian on Aug 20, 2009 5:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anil Naidoo of the Council of Canadians rightly questions FPIC, especially if a corporate front-group like The Nature Conservancy(TNC) backs its application.

TNC was long-ago exposed in the Washington Post and elsewhere as both corrupt, and working in concert with "free market" corporate agendas seeking privatization of publicly-owned resources.

All readers need to understand there can be no reconciliation between these corporate free market agendas and the best interests of ANY community.

FPIC will likely function as a Trojan Horse to "gift" a community with illusions of their best interests being assured, only to wake-up later to find in the FPIC fine-print, access to water flows to corporate profits first.

Corporations function on maximizing profits at ANY cost, and can in no way be confused with the best interests of citizens.

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And So Because The Engineer Charged Me £97, Instead of £10,000
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Aug 21, 2009 1:31 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought well

What the hell

Lets Go To India Again

And The Maldives Again

And My Daughter Now Having Secured Her Position At The University She Really Wanted To Go To - and All The Funds Have Come Through For Her...

And some of her friends who also have been given great offers at Universities All Over The Place - and Some of Them Are Thinking About Taking a Year Off...

Katy has already Been Invited to a Trip To Amsterdam in November From Her New Home

Tony

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Nike Dunk
Posted by: Nike Dunk on Aug 23, 2009 11:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for your sharing. Maybe you are interested in Nike Dunk.

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thanks ,peter.T
Posted by: wetwe on Aug 25, 2009 1:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They may coexist for a while. DVD to MOV Mac

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