Coca-Cola and Water - An Unsustainable Relationship
Common Dreams NewsCenter
March 7, 2006
CommonDreams.org
by Amit Srivastava
Water is essential to life and the lifeblood of our planet. Without water, we cannot sustain life.
Lack of access to clean drinking water is a reality for over 1.2 billion people- about 20% of the world's population, and mostly in developing parts of the world. Providing access to potable water remains one of the greatest challenges for the global community today.
From March 16-22, 2006, Mexico will host the fourth World Water Forum, an important international meeting aimed at ameliorating the water crisis in the world and "assuring better living standards for people all over the world and a more responsible social behavior towards water issues in-line with the pursuit of sustainable development," according to the forum organizers.
What then, we ask, is the Coca-Cola company doing as one of the leading sponsors of the World Water Forum? As a champion of unsustainable use of water globally, Coca-Cola's sponsorship of the forum puts the very credibility of the World Water Forum at stake.
The Coca-Cola company is the largest beverage company in the world, and according to its own admission, the company used 283 billion liters of water in 2004.
Any way you look at it, 283 billion liters of water is a lot of water-particularly in a world where over 1 billion people in the world cannot meet their basic water needs.
It is enough water to meet the entire world's drinking needs for 10 days! If we use the water that Coca-Cola used in 2004, we could meet the entire drinking needs of people who don't currently have access to clean drinking water for 47 days!
To add insult to injury, the Coca-Cola company doesn't just stop at extracting 283 billion liters of water.
The Coca-Cola company proudly boasts that it has a water use ratio of 2.7 to 1. That is, for every 2.7 liters of water (freshwater) it takes from the earth, it produces 1 liter of product. What happens to the remaining 1.7 liters (or 63%) of the water? It is used to clean bottles and machinery, and is discarded as wastewater.
In a world where one of 5 people do not have access to potable water, it is indeed preposterous that any company could extract such large amounts of life sustaining water, and convert the vast majority of the freshwater into wastewater. Especially given that freshwater is scarce- only 2.5% of all the water in the world is freshwater, the rest being salt water.
Coca-Cola's business practices, as well as its products, are coming under scrutiny from consumers worldwide. Coca-Cola products contribute significantly to a myriad of health problems, including obesity, diabetes and dental problems, and a significant campaign has emerged to remove such products from our schools.
Nowhere is Coca-Cola's blatant disregard for water and communities that sustain themselves from water more evident than in
Tens of thousands of people all across
The company regularly extracts up to one million liters of water per day in some areas in
Coca-Cola's water use ratio in
The impacts being felt by the communities who live around Coca-Cola's bottling plants are no small matter. In a country where over 70% of the population still makes a living related to agriculture, taking away the water and poisoning the remaining water and the soil has had dramatic consequences.
Thousands of farmers across
Coca-Cola's abuses in
Yielding to the growing public outcry, the state government of Kerala has now challenged the Coca-Cola company's operations to the Supreme Court of India, arguing that "poor villages are deprived of drinking water due to overuse of ground water by Coca-Cola plant at Plachimada to produce bottled drinks for sale to people who have purchasing capacity in different cities of the country."
Similarly, in other parts of
Communities in
Coca-Cola's sponsorship of the World Water Forum is viewed incredulously by communities in
Coca-Cola's sponsorship of the World Water Forum is clearly a public relations maneuver by the company to divert attention from the reality of Coca-Cola's relationship with water.
Communities in
Until then the Coca-Cola company has no place at the World Water Forum.
Amit Srivastava is the coordinator of
Source:
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0307-30.htm