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Water

Nestle Targets Aquifers and Springs in New England for Bottled Water

By Amy Vickers, AlterNet. Posted August 5, 2008.


In its attempts to strike blue gold, Nestle has pursued water extraction deals that have many locals seeing red.
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Over a half-billion dollars of Massachusetts' taxpayer money will be spent this year on clean drinking water program loans to communities, yet Beacon Hill has been strangely silent about -- and invested not one penny in defense of -- small- and often low-income rural towns that stand alone against what many see as a threat to their drinking water supplies: Swiss-based Nestlé Waters.

Nestlé, the old candy company that once spawned an international boycott of its products for proffering cheap infant formula as better than mother's milk to women in developing countries, now profits from what many say is sullying another sacred solution: the bottling of pristine waters. It may soon do this in some of the state's most water-stressed and fragile communities.

For more than a year, Nestlé and its well drillers, technical consultants, and lawyers have been quietly surveying the profit potential in the few remaining unspoiled springs and aquifers in Central and Western Massachusetts. In its attempts to strike blue gold, the firm has aggressively pursued water extraction deals that have many locals seeing red.

Two recent efforts by Nestlé to pursue pumping operations in small towns illustrate why withdrawals for commercial water bottling operations in the state pose unacceptable risks, not only to local drinking water supplies, but also to such natural assets as fisheries and conservation land. Last summer, Montague residents halted -- at least for now -- Nestlé's pursuit of the spring water beneath Montague Plains, a state wildlife management area that also recharges critical ground water for a state fish hatchery and the local wells on which many homes and farms depend.

This spring, after considerable public outcry, Clinton town officials appeared to have finally rejected Nestlé's bid to extract and export up to a quarter-million gallons of spring water a day -- equal to 4 million servings of some of the cleanest drinking water in the state -- from the nearly 600-acre Wekepeke Reservation land that Clinton owns in the town of Sterling. The offer posed several legal issues, not least the fact that Clinton's 19th-century water rights to the Wekepeke are for surface water -- not spring water -- and only for town public water supply needs.

Clinton stopped using Wekepeke water in the 1960s and the town is now supplied by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority. Sterling residents, 70 percent of whom rely on the Wekepeke for ground water to supply their home wells, were incensed and asked why another town would have the right to literally sell the water beneath their feet for global export to the highest bidder.

Since when has Massachusetts enjoyed a surplus of pristine drinking water supplies that multinational firms, not Bay State citizens, are considered more deserving to receive? The state classifies 70 percent of state river drainage basins as "flow-stressed." Since when have they been restored to such good health that we now have a surfeit of naturally clean freshwater ready for shipping to bottle-chugging out-of-staters -- and this in an era in which we face unprecedented global warming, increased agricultural irrigation needs, and worsening water pollution, which requires skyrocketing treatment costs?

Leaders in government, business, religious, and spiritual movements across America are increasingly rejecting bottled water because of its indefensible environmental costs. It is time that this state also calls a halt to the aggressive intrusions of the bottled water industry into the vulnerable water sources that supply small-town homes, farms, and public conservation lands.

The legislature should place an immediate statewide moratorium of at least two years on new bottled water extractions along with a cap on existing withdrawals.

In the meantime, an assessment of the state's available water supplies and needs -- coupled with long-term climate change forecasts -- must be made. Further, a statewide law must be enacted that affirms that the waters of Massachusetts shall be protected in perpetuity for its inhabitants, first and foremost, and that communities and aquifer protection areas may ban out-of-state water exports.

Unless it can be proven that Massachusetts has water to spare, there is no time to waste in stopping the bottled water industry from draining our most prized and irreplaceable sources of clean drinking water.


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See more stories tagged with: water privatization, bottle water, nestle

Amy Vickers, who lives in Amherst, is an engineer and water conservation consultant.

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Nestle Story
Posted by: Rich_P on Aug 6, 2008 5:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You say in your article "unacceptable risks, not only to local drinking water supplies, but also to such natural assets as fisheries and conservation land." w/o specifying what those risks are and what facts you have to back them up.

Knowing a thing or two about water tables, I doubt very much if the amount of water Nestle is going to pump can be proven to have an detrimental effect on local water resources.

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

» RE: Nestle Story Posted by: Jayzer
» Oh Come On Posted by: blues
» RE: Oh Come On Posted by: rinthy
Boycott the Evil Ones/They don't care about you.
Posted by: jeffreytaos on Aug 15, 2008 11:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Nestle have been repeatedly criticised and widely boycotted in a number of countries because of their violation of international codes on the marketing of baby milk products."

Nestle holds about 50% of the world's breast milk substitute market and is being boycotted for continued breaches of the 1981 WHO (World Health Organisation) Code regulating the marketing of breast milk substitutes.

Nestle encourages bottle feeding primarily by either giving away free samples of baby milk to hospitals, or neglecting to collect payments.

It has been criticised for misinforming mothers and health workers in promotional literature.

Nestle implies that malnourished mothers, and mothers of twins and premature babies are unable to breastfeed, despite health organisations claims that there is no evidence to support this.

Even in the UK, bottle-fed babies are up to ten times more likely to develop gastro intestinal infections, but in the Third World, where clean water may be absent, mothers may be illiterate and independent health care and advice may be lacking, bottle feeding can be more dangerous.

This can lead to a situation where babies are left vulnerable to dysentery, malnutrition and death, and Nestle is able to retain its estimated $4 billion market share in the baby-milk industry.

Over 3000 infants die every day from baby bottle disease (WHO), and formula dependant babies create massive economic strain on poor families, contributing to unsustainable land use.

Nestle were recently criticised by Oxfam for pursuing the Ethiopian Government for US $6 million as the country attempts to tackle a famine affecting 11 million people.This payment was so large because they demanded it in US dollars not local currency at the current rate of exchange not that of 1975 .

Nestle did not even own the company when the factory was nationalised. Nestle has finally accepted US $1.51 million offered by the government on 23/1/3 following the campaign run by Oxfam which created a public relations nightmare.

The workers in a Nestle chocolate plant in Cacapava, Brazil went on strike in 1989, complaining of poor working conditions, including discrimination against women, lack of protective clothing and inadequate safety conditions.

Within two months of the beginning of the strike the company had sacked forty of its workers, including most of the strike organisers.

Nestle has subsidiaries in some of the most repressive regimes in the world, including Brazil, China, Colombia, Egypt, El Salvador, Guatemala, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Lebanon, Mexico, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Senegal, Sri Lanka and Turkey.

Known Aliases - Nestle owned products to avoid include L'Oreal, Cross and Blackwell, Branston, Ski, Munch Bunch, Buitoni, Vittel, Perrier, Herta, Purina, Allenis, Maggi, Peter's, Milo, Carnation, Caterer's Blend, GoDog, Lean Cuisine, Sunshine, Rowntrees, Breath Fresh, Quik Eze, Scanlens, Nesquik, Vitari, Nescafe, GoPet, International Roast, Medallion, Papa Guiseppi's, Chapstick, Dermoplast, Mighty Dog, and a frightening number of chocolate bars.


BOYCOTT THESE KNOWN COMPANIES!

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

Let's boycott.
Posted by: jeffreytaos on Aug 15, 2008 11:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Use the power of the Internet to learn about Nestle. Use your own creative energy at home in Mass. to make the boycott real. Understanding all their products will help. We buy many Nestle products everyday, but we probably did not realize who made the product. A colorful poster in your community would do more to change the situation than only discussion on the Internet. You can make a colorful poster using a few pictures of Nestle products and your own words. Please put your comments on this blog and I'll try to add more info as time passes. But the most effective campaign will not be on the internet, it will be in your community. If people in Mass. realize and cease to purchase all of Nestle products, the company will go away. Start with pictures of the popular bottled waters they sell, put the word Boycott in big letters, then provide a link to a page you find interesting. To reclaim America, we have to act with the only power we have, our wallets. If thousands of people in Mass stop buying, Nestle will know. They may not tell you they know, but they will know when the sales statistics roll in on their computers. There is a world wide boycott going on right now. Green Peace is against Nestle as are many many more environmentally aware people. You told me about Nestle, now I'm telling you to bring the boycott to every storefront and university in Mass. You have the power, be it only one person. A picture at the health food store or the Whole Foods Market will influence a hundred buyers. I made the blog to say how easy it can be for you to use a blog to assemble your facts and information. But a blog won't be the solution. It can be a link for your audience to learn more. Thanks.

http://boycottnestle.wordpress.com/

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