Nestle Pays Only $524 to Extract 27,000,000 Gallons of California Drinking Water
20
August, 2015
Nestle
has found itself more and more frequently in the glare of
the California
drought-shame spotlight than
it would arguably care to be — though not frequently enough,
apparently, for the megacorporation to have spontaneously sprouted
a conscience.
Drought-shaming
worked sufficiently enough for Starbucks to stop
bottling water in
the now-arid state entirely, uprooting its operations all the way to
Pennsylvania.
But Nestle simply shrugged off public outrage and
then upped
the ante by
increasing its draw from natural springs — most notoriously in
the San
Bernardino National Forest — with
an absurdly expired permit.
Because profit, of
course. Or, perhaps more befittingly, theft. But
you get the idea.
Nestle
has somehow managed the
most sweetheart of deals for its Arrowhead 100% Mountain Spring
Water, which is ostensibly sourced from Arrowhead Springs — and
which also happens
to be located on public land in a national forest.
In
2013, the company drew 27
million gallons of water from 12 springs in
Strawberry Canyon for the brand — apparently by employing rather
impressive legerdemain — considering
the permit to do so expired
in 1988.
But,
as Nestle will tell you, that really isn’t cause for concern since
it swears it is a good steward of the land and, after all, that
expired permit’s annual fee has been diligently and faithfully paid
in full — all $524 of
it.
And
that isn’t the only water it collects. Another 51
million gallons of groundwater were
drawn from the area by Nestle that same year.
There
is another site the company drains for profit while California’s
historic drought rages on: Deer Canyon. Last year, Nestle drew 76
million gallons from the springs in that location,
which is a sizable increase over 2013’s 56 million-gallon draw —
and under circumstances just as questionable as water collection at
Arrowhead.
This
extensive collection of water is undoubtedly having detrimental
effects on the ecosystem and its numerous endangered and threatened
species, though impact studies aren’t available because they were
mysteriously stopped before ever getting underway.
In
fact, the review process necessary to renew Nestle’s antiquated
permit met a similarly enigmatic termination: once planning stages
made apparent the hefty price tag and complicated steps said review
would entail, the
review was simply
dropped. Completely.
Without any new stipulations or stricter regulations added to the
expired permit that Nestle was ostensibly following anyway —
though, obviously, that remains an open question.
In
2014, Nestle
used roughly 705 million gallons of water in its operations in
California,
according to natural resource manager Larry Lawrence. That’s 2,164
acre-feet of water —
enough to “irrigate
700 acres of farmland” or “fill
1,068 Olympic-sized swimming pools,” as
Ian James pointed
out in
The Desert Sun.
Though
there is no way to verify exactly how much Nestle must spend to
produce a single bottle of Arrowhead spring water, the astronomical
profit is undeniable fact: the
most popular size of a bottle of Arrowhead 100% Mountain Spring Water
(1 liter) retails for 89¢ — putting
the potential profit for Nestle in the tens of billions.
Activists
have called for a boycott of Nestle
Waters and
all Nestle
products until
they are held accountable for their actions in California.
There
is much more to be revealed in future articles as the investigation
into Nestle’s reckless profit-seeking during California’s
unprecedented drought continues.
This
is the second in our
series of
investigations into Nestle’s role in extracting massive amounts of
groundwater in California during the record drought. The third in
this series will delve further into Nestle’s corrupt business
practices. Make sure you don’t miss the rest of this series!
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Pays Only $524 to Extract 27,000,000 Gallons of California Drinking
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Someone is doing something about this in Oregon
Woman's five-day fast outside Cascade Locks City Hall targets Nestle deal
20
August, 2015
Anna
Mae Leonard hasn't done much talking since she began sitting outside
Cascade Locks City Hall on Monday.
Leonard,
a member of the Confederated
Tribes of Warm Springs,
has been there from sunup to sundown, dressed in full Columbia River
longhouse regalia, trying to sleep.
It's
the best way to avoid pangs of hunger and thirst during a five-day
fast that permits no food or drink, other than a ceremonial sip from
Oxbow Springs each morning and night.
The
cardboard signs taped to a tree near Leonard's roadside blanket do
the talking for her.
"Honor
The Treaty of 1855," one sign reads.
The
other: "Five Days of NO Water! NO FOOD! FAST in Protest of
NestlƩ."
The
messages are directed toward any Cascade Locks city official who
might glance out the window from the city administration building
across the street.
"I
want the council to think about what a world would be like without
water," Leonard said Wednesday. "I want them to look at me
suffer and think about how the fish will suffer without that cold
spring water."
NestlƩ
wants to gain access to Oxbow Springs, a forested spring just outside
the small Columbia River Gorge town that supplies water to a state
salmon hatchery.
The
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife owns water rights at Oxbow
Springs. In April, the department's leaders agreed
to swap a portion of their water rights at
the spring in exchange for an equal portion from the Cascade Locks
municipal water system.
In
turn, Cascade Locks would sell the spring water to NestlƩ, which
would bottle and sell 100 million gallons of it each year to
customers throughout the Northwest.
NestlƩ's
proposed $50 million bottling plant could bring as many as 50 jobs
and double the city's property tax base. Proponents of the plant have
lauded its economic benefits, but others have questioned the decision
to welcome a company with
a spotty track record on
the environment and human rights.
The
Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs have joined the growing list
of Oregon environmental groups and politicians who have expressed
concern about NestlƩ's plans in Cascade Locks.
The
tribes' chairman, Eugene Greene Jr., penned a letter in May urging
Gov. Kate Brown to step in. Tribal members have staged protests in
Cascade Locks and taken to social media to rally supporters.
On
Wednesday, Leonard, a Cascade Locks resident, said she hopes her
five-day fast hammers tribal leaders' message home. More than a dozen
fellow activists, including Cascade Locks residents,
environmentalists and tribal fishermen, joined her outside City Hall
in a protest that drew honks from passing cars and complaints from
neighbors who support NestlƩ.
Oxbow
Springs drains into Herman Creek, a popular fishing spot for
recreational and tribal fishermen. A research group commissioned by
NestlƩ to study impacts of bottling water from the springs found
doing so would not harm salmon in the creek.
Leonard
doesn't believe it. The study was finished years ago, she said,
before Oregon was in an historic drought that has left waterways
throughout the state warm and shallow.
Bad
salmon runs are devastating for the tribal fishermen who for years
have sold their catch under the Bridge of the Gods in Cascade Locks.
"NestlƩ
already has millions, they don't need our water," said Ernest J.
Edwards, a Yakama
Nation fisherman
who protested with Leonard on Wednesday. "Our water is for the
salmon."
Diana
Enright, a spokeswoman for the state water department, said the
agency could issue a preliminary decision on the water rights swap
later this summer. At that point, anyone can protest the decision
within 30 days. Protests with potential legal standing could trigger
a hearing before an administrative law judge.
Leonard
said she expects tribal treaty fishing rights in the Columbia River
to come into play.
--
Kelly House
To see the Facebook of NO Nestle in Cascade Locks GO HERE
I totally support this action having had a grand father that did 28 days on an Irish Republican Hunger Strike but I wish they would drink more. Organ damage for this cause isn't necessary.
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