Bottled water is facing growing controversy amid California's drought. (photo: Alamy)
20 April 15
alifornians facing the prospect of endless drought, mandated cuts
in water use and the browning of their summer lawns are mounting a
revolt against the bottled water industry, following revelations that
Nestlé and other big companies are taking advantage of poor government
oversight to deplete mountain streams and watersheds at vast profit.
An online petition
urging an immediate end to Nestle’s water bottling operations in the
state has gathered more than 150,000 signatures, in the wake of an
investigation by the San Bernardino Desert Sun that showed the company is taking water from some of California’s driest areas on permits that expired as long as 27 years ago.
Last month a protest at a Nestlé Waters North America
bottling plant in Sacramento, the state capital, forced a one-day
closure as protesters brandishing symbolic plastic torches and
pitchforks blocked the entrances. The revelations have agencies from the
California State Water Resources Control Board to the US Forest Service
scrambling to justify a regulatory framework that is poorly policed and
imposes almost no requirements on the big water companies to declare
how much water they are taking.
Nestlé itself insists its water use is efficient and
has minimal impact on the environment – something the activists reject
out of hand.
“While California
is facing record drought conditions, it is unconscionable that Nestlé
would continue to bottle the state’s precious water, export it and sell
it for profit,” says the petition, which is sponsored by the political
activist organisation the Courage Campaign.
While city-dwellers and tourists might not think twice
before knocking back an Arrowhead – Nestlé’s premier California still
water brand – or a Crystal Geyser, residents near the affected springs
and watersheds tend to be more vocal, because every drop Nestlé takes is
one drop less for their own use and for the local flora and fauna.
“Nestlé has repeatedly ignored requests from local residents to halt its operations,” said Erin Diaz of the nonprofit Corporate Accountability International,
which is running a “Think Outside the Bottle” campaign. “It’s clear
that Nestlé has no intention of voluntarily halting its dangerous water
bottling practices. It’s time for state water regulators to step in.”
Nestlé and its competitors point out that bottled water accounts for a tiny fraction of California’s overall use, particularly when compared with the state’s vast agricultural infrastructure. Almond farming alone sucks down 10% of the state’s water, at a rate of roughly one gallon per almond.
In an online op-ed
piece addressing the company’s relation to the drought, Nestlé Waters
North America president and chief executive Tim Brown wrote: “We have
made investments in all five of our facilities in California to further
reduce the amount of water used for bottling and non-bottling processes.
“In 2014, we invested in conservation measures, which
are projected to save at least 1.4 million gallons of water in
California each year.”
But water-bottling also carries symbolic weight
because it takes a natural resource that theoretically belongs to all
and turns it into a product retailing for many thousands – some studies
suggest hundreds of thousands – of times what it costs at source.
Studies over the past decade and a half have challenged
the claims of an industry that barely existed 25 years ago that bottled
water is healthier than tap – in fact somewhere between one quarter and
one half of bottled water comes from the tap – and decried the environmental impact of the plastic bottles it usually comes in.
“Pure drink or pure hype?” the National Resources Defense Council
asked in 1999, and the question has never gone away. Until now,
however, such objections have had little impact on the growth of the
industry, whose sales topped 10bn gallons in the US for the first time in 2013 – 32 gallons per person – and are projected to be as high as 13bn gallons in 2014.
The US is now the world’s second-biggest consumer of
bottled water, behind China. Nestlé and the other water giants,
Coca-Cola and Pepsi, have often cut deals with relatively isolated,
impoverished rural communities whereby they take a percentage of the
local water supply, paying enough to keep municipal rates low for local
residents. Government oversight often falls between the cracks of state
agencies, the US Forest Service and autonomous Indian tribes, giving the
companies greater leeway.
The Desert Sun investigation found that a Nestlé
pumping operation at Strawberry Creek in the San Bernardino National
Forest, 60 miles east of Los Angeles, had been unlicensed since 1987. Another operation
in the same National Forest, at Deer Canyon Springs, involves a deal
between Nestlé and the local water district that has not been permitted
since 1994.
The US Forest Service, which has undergone multiple budget cuts over past decades and has been under attack
for its handling of fire prevention and restoration in the parched
American West as well as water management, now says that dealing with
the expired permits and considering whether to renew them is now a “top
priority”.
One key question will be how much water Nestlé is taking to create what one industry group delightfully
calls “the quintessential hydrating beverage”. The company claims 700m
gallons a year, or about what it takes to keep two golf courses green.
That might more easily be verified if legislation to force regular
disclosure of volumes bottled and sold had not been vetoed by former
governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2008 and 2010.
Another regulatory headache, according to the activist
group Food and Water Watch, is the near-absence of legislation
governing groundwater – an absence largely explained by the lobbying power of agribusiness in a state that boasts the single most productive concentration of farm land on the planet.
Governor Jerry Brown, who has come under fire
for imposing a 25% reduction in water use on cities and municipalities
but not on farms, signed a relatively toothless law last year that gave
the state no power to assign rights to groundwater use.
According to Adam Scow, California director of Food and Water Watch, the governor and state agencies could in theory disregard the legislature and act on the California constitution which bars “waste or unreasonable use” of the state’s water supply.
“We need to start managing and protecting groundwater
as a public resource,” Scow said. “In a drought, bottling public water
for private profit qualifies as wasteful and unreasonable.”
Nestle is a blood sucking vampire company whose CEO declared that water was not a "human right" and that people MUST pay for it. People like him would charge us for the air we breathe if he could get away with it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEy4aT9Rd4g