banner unionsafete


Nestle's Campaign To Control, Bottle, And Sell Localised Water Supplies Continues

As previously reported by Unionsafety, the world's largest bottled water supplier, Nestle, announced to the World Economic Forum, that water is not an automatic right of human beings, but a product that has to be paid for.

For well over ten years now, the Swiss company has been ravaging the world's water supplies by building bottling plants adjacent to natural water reserves, buying up the rights to the water source and then selling it bottled to the local people. Once the source dries up, they simply move on to the next!

A perfect example of this Nestlé aim at controlling the world's water supplies can be seen from this latest media report on what is happening to one town in the USA:

Nestlé subsidiary Poland Spring set its sights on the tiny town of Fryeburg, Maine, USA nearly a decade ago, pushing to build a huge bottling plant and take long-term control over the town's spring water. Nestlé has sued the small town multiple times, arguing that its right to grow market share is more important than the town's right to self-determination.  

Nestlé wants to lock up its control over Fryeburg’s water with a contract that -- including extensions -- lasts until 2057!

This lifetime contract would be unprecedented in the United States, and would be a major victory for water privatisation companies. Tell Nestlé and Poland Spring to stop bullying the people of Fryeburg.

Nestlé has tried every trick of the trade in fighting Fryeburg, relentlessly working to grind down and bankrupt opposition in the town with a wave of lawsuits. The corporation has found itself shut out of fifty-year contracts, so it is pushing a 25 year contract -- with four five-year extensions -- to test the limits of how long it can lock up water before people fight back.

Nestlé has also sunk deep into Maine politics, but local activists have been fighting back and are winning victories.

Earlier this year, it was revealed that every single member of the Maine Public Utilities Commission -- the body that would rule on Nestlé's Fryeburg fight -- had connections to the corporation, forcing the Commission to recuse itself from the case. This month, the entire membership of the Fryeburg Water District resigned under threat of recall.

This relentless pressure is having an effect.

If Nestlé sees that its bullying is hurting its global brand, the company will rethink its strategy of taking Fryeburg's water. Nestlé is trying to retell the Story of water, saying it's a good up for sale to the highest bidder. This way, Nestlé gets it for a steal, pumps aquifers dry, and then moves on to the next town.

Source: Story of Stuff

image: back to news page

Designed, Hosted and Maintained by Union Safety Services