http://www.alternet.org/environment/58604/
AlterNet: Environment:

Pepsi Forced to Admit It's Bottling Tap Water

By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Posted on August 2, 2007

AMY GOODMAN: The soft drink giant Pepsi has been forced to make an 
embarrassing admission: Its bestselling Aquafina bottled water is 
nothing more than tap water. Last week, Pepsi agreed to change the 
labels of Aquafina to indicate the water comes from a public water 
source. Pepsi agreed to change its label under pressure from the 
advocacy group Corporate Accountability International, which has been 
leading an increasingly successful campaign against bottled water.

In San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom recently banned city departments 
from using city money to buy any kind of bottled water. In New York, 
local residents are being urged to drink tap water. The U.S. 
Conference of Mayors has passed a resolution that highlighted the 
importance of municipal water and called for more scrutiny of the 
impact of bottled water on city waste.

The environmental impact of the country's obsession with bottled 
water has been staggering. Each day an estimated 60 million plastic 
water bottles are thrown away. Most are not recycled. The Pacific 
Institute has estimated 20 million barrels of oil are used each year 
to make the plastic for water bottles.

Economically, it makes sense to stop buying bottled water as well. 
The Arizona Daily Star recently examined the cost difference between 
bottled water and water from the city's municipal supply. A 
half-liter of Pepsi's Aquafina at a Tucson convenience store costs 
$1.39. The bottle contains purified water from the Tucson water 
supply. From the tap, you can pour over 6.4 gallons for a penny. That 
makes the bottled stuff about 7,000 times more expensive, even though 
Aquafina is using the same water source.

Gigi Kellett of Corporate Accountability International joins us in 
Boston, the group spearheading the Think Outside the Bottle campaign. 
We're also joined by freelance writer Michael Blanding. Last year he 
wrote an article for Alternet.org called "The Bottled Water Lie." We 
welcome you both to Democracy Now!

I want to begin with Gigi Kellett. Talk about Pepsi's admission.

GIGI KELLETT: Well, after a couple of years of our Think Outside the 
Bottle campaign, we have been asking of the bottled water 
corporations to come clean about where they get their water, what is 
the source of the water that they're bottling, because most people 
don't know that Pepsi's Aquafina, Coke's Dasani, come from our public 
water systems. And so, after thousands of phone calls, thousands of 
public comments submitted to the corporation, and us taking these 
demands directly to the corporation's annual shareholder meeting this 
year, Pepsi last week made the announcement that it would reveal that 
it gets its water from our public water systems.

AMY GOODMAN: Now, where exactly does Pepsi get it? Which public water supply?

GIGI KELLETT: Well, that is the issue that we're really looking at 
next, is what cities are they bottling the water in. You know, here 
in Massachusetts, it's coming from Ayre, Mass. So we want to make 
sure that on those bottles it says: "Public water source: Ayre, 
Massachusetts." That way, people know exactly what they're getting 
when they're buying that Aquafina bottled water.

AMY GOODMAN: Ayre being the name of a town in Massachusetts.

GIGI KELLETT: Ayre is the name of a town, right. Exactly.

AMY GOODMAN: And what happens to the town? They have their public 
water supply, and they have the plant for Pepsi?

GIGI KELLETT: That's right. We want to make sure that -- you know, 
Pepsi has certainly taken a lead on this for the bottled water 
industry, and we want to make sure that Coke and Nestle also follow 
suit. One of the things that we're finding as we're talking to people 
about this issue on the street is that they don't know where the 
water is coming from. And the bottled water corporations have spent 
tens of millions of dollars on ads that make people think that 
bottled water is somehow better, cleaner, safer than our public water 
systems. And in reality, we know that that's not true. And so, we 
want to make sure that we're increasing our people's confidence in 
their public water systems once again and knowing that we need to be 
investing in our public systems.

AMY GOODMAN: Gigi, can you go further on who owns what? You mention 
Nestle. What does Nestle own?

GIGI KELLETT: Nestle owns several dozen brands of bottled water. The 
bottled water brand they source from our public water systems is 
called Nestle Pure Life. They also own Poland Spring, Ozarka, 
Arrowhead. The list goes on. And regionally, it's distributed across 
the country. And then we also have Coca-Cola, which bottles Dasani 
water, and, of course, Pepsi with Aquafina.

AMY GOODMAN: And when it comes to being tap water, what is the 
difference between plain tap water and distilled water from these 
public sources.

GIGI KELLETT: Well, there's very little difference. You know, our 
public water systems go through a very rigorous testing and 
monitoring system and is tested by the Environmental Protection 
Agency. So we want to make sure that people know that our public 
water systems are much better regulated than these bottled water 
brands, which don't have to go through the same rigorous type of 
process.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Gigi Kellett, associate campaigns 
director of Corporate Accountability International. Michael Blanding, 
a freelance writer, has written the piece "The Bottled Water Lie." 
Michael, what is the lie?

MICHAEL BLANDING: Well, there are actually several lies, I think, 
that the bottled water companies perpetrate, but I think the main one 
is exactly what Gigi said, that this image bolstered by, you know, 
millions and millions of dollars of advertising that bottled water is 
somehow better for you, it tastes better, it's more pure. And in many 
cases, that's simply not true. People are paying enormous premiums 
for bottled water and don't even realize the fact that in many cases 
not only does tap water taste the same, but that it's actually more 
tightly regulated and actually healthier for you. There have been, 
you know, several cases of bottled water that's actually been 
contaminated and found to contain hazardous chemicals. And tap water, 
there's actually a rigorous testing and monitoring of the water 
supply that actually in many cases makes it healthier.

AMY GOODMAN: When we come back from break, I want to talk about some 
of those cases of contamination, but also talk about the community 
struggles that are working to take back their water supply. Our 
guests are Michael Blanding, who wrote "The Bottled Water Lie," and 
Gigi Kellett of Corporate Accountability International. Stay with us.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: Now, Michael, you begin your piece by talking about 
Antonia Mahoney. Talk about who she is.

MICHAEL BLANDING: She was someone who was just walking down the 
street in downtown Boston when the folks at Corporate Accountability 
-- Gigi and the folks in her group -- were holding something called 
the Tap Water Challenge, which was a taste test between tap water and 
various bottled water brands, Aquafina and Dasani. And I stood there 
during the afternoon and watched many people come up who were bottled 
water drinkers and could swear that they could tell the difference 
and that they could recognize their brand.

And Antonia Mahoney was one of those who -- she actually had given 
off drinking tap water a few years ago and was drinking only Poland 
Spring and knew that she would be able to tell Poland Spring from all 
the other types of water that she was drinking there. And it turned 
out that what she thought was Poland Spring was actually the tap 
water from Boston, the good old tap water, which -- we actually have 
very good tap water that comes from western Mass here. So she was 
very surprised and shocked, and decided right there that she was 
going to leave off her contract of paying $30 a month for Poland 
Spring water, which she got delivered to her house. So it was very -- 
and there were other experiences like that during the day that I 
witnessed.

AMY GOODMAN: Michael, you write about the problems of a suspected 
carcinogen chemical, bromate. You talk about the contamination of 
Dasani water, owned by Coca-Cola, in 2004. Explain what the problems 
are, the contamination issues.

MICHAEL BLANDING: So, ironically, one of the processes that actually 
takes the tap water and purifies it -- it's called ozonation -- can 
actually in some cases have a byproduct, which is bromate, which is, 
as you say, a suspected carcinogen. And the largest case of 
contamination was in the U.K. in 2004, right when Dasani launched in 
the United Kingdom. They had something like a half-million bottles of 
Dasani water actually found to be contaminated, and people were 
getting sick. And it's just indicative of the lack of controls and 
the lack of monitoring that you find with bottled water.

And it's not an isolated case. There have been many others that have 
occurred. Most recently up in Upstate New York, with an independent 
bottled water company, there were multiple cases of bromate 
contamination, as well.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the issue of filtering? First of all, 
I don't know if people realize when something says "public water 
source" that it means tap water. But then, what it means for that tap 
water to be filtered -- you talk about additional techniques like 
reverse-osmosis.

MICHAEL BLANDING: Right, yeah. So there are various techniques that 
the companies use, and they tout them as these proprietary techniques 
that they go through seven different phases of filtering, and all the 
rest of it. And when you look at it, though -- reverse osmosis is the 
main one, which is basically just pushing water through a membrane to 
remove contaminants, and it's actually very similar to the type of 
process that can be found in home water filters, just the kind that 
you attach to your tap for a couple of hundred bucks. So -- it's not 
as sophisticated as they might pretend that it is.

AMY GOODMAN: And internationally, the movements, from Bolivia to 
Peru, La Paz, all over.

MICHAEL BLANDING: Yeah. What's interesting is that, here in the 
United States, there are several communities that have actually had 
plants take a lot of water from their groundwater up in Michigan 
where they can actually see the water level of one of their streams 
declining because of the massive amount that Nestle was taking from 
their water.

And it's even a more critical issue in other countries where water 
scarcity is a real problem, so places like India, where Coca-Cola and 
Pepsi have actually really depleted communities, and farmers have 
been unable to grow their crops, it's kind of been a double whammy. 
They've taken the water, and then the water that they -- the waste 
water they've dumped back has been polluted, in many cases. And so, 
that's one issue, is just the depletion of water from the plants 
themselves.

And then the other issue, which I know Gigi could talk about, is just 
the perception that comes across that somehow tap water is -- 
municipal water is somehow not as good as water that's been 
privatized. And so, you have -- it sort of starts this steady creep 
of where privatization of water sources becomes OK. And there have 
been many communities, like in Bolivia, where water supplies have 
been privatized and have been sold back to -- water that was 
previously free has, you know, skyrocketed in price. And people have 
taken to the streets and protested and actually got the private 
companies to leave.

AMY GOODMAN: Gigi Kellett, let's talk about the tainting of the image 
of the municipal water supply in this country, the effect of the 
bottled water advertising industry campaigns.

GIGI KELLETT: Well, this is something that's of real concern to our 
organization and our members and activists across the country, 
because we are seeing this -- who are we turning to to provide our 
drinking water? And there are -- these bottled water corporations are 
spending tens of millions of dollars every year on ads that 
effectively undermine people's confidence in their water.

There was actually a poll done by the University of Arkansas earlier 
this year that found young people tend to choose bottled water over 
tap water, because they feel it's somehow cleaner or better than 
their public water systems. And as we've already mentioned here, we 
know that in reality that's not true. So there is a real concern 
about the impact that these bottled water corporations are having on 
the way we think about water.

And our Think Outside the Bottle campaign is aiming to change that, 
and we're having real success with cities like San Francisco and Ann 
Arbor, Mich., and New York City, taking a lead on putting their 
public water systems back in the forefront and not contracting with 
bottled water corporations, for example, like in Salt Lake City and 
in San Francisco. And we're seeing restaurants turn to the tap in 
lieu of bottled water. So there's a lot that people are starting to 
look at in terms of this industry and what changes we can make to 
promote our own public water systems here in this country and make 
sure that they have the funding they need to thrive, and that also 
we're looking internationally to make sure that countries that may be 
cash-strapped also have the resources they need to have good, strong 
public water systems and not turn to privatization.

AMY GOODMAN: Gigi, tell us about what happened in Salt Lake City and 
in San Francisco, with the mayor announcing that city money cannot be 
used to buy bottled water.

GIGI KELLETT: That's right. You know, the mayor of San Francisco, 
Gavin Newsom, after we had been working with his staff there, working 
with the San Francisco Department of the Environment and the San 
Francisco Public Utilities Commission, they looked at how much money 
they were spending on bottled water every year. It was close to a 
half-million dollars. And they said, "We're the forefront. We're 
cities. We're the forefront of ensuring that people have access to 
good, safe, clean water. And we're also now at the forefront of 
dealing with the waste that results from the bottled water industry. 
So we need to take a stand as a city." And in June, Mayor Newsom 
issued an executive order saying that the city would no longer be 
buying bottled water. And he joined with the mayor of Salt Lake City, 
Rocky Anderson, and also the mayor of Minneapolis, R.T. Rybak, to put 
forward a resolution at the U.S. Conference of Mayors calling on a 
study to really look at what are the impacts of bottled water on our 
municipal waste. So it's a real great leadership that we're seeing of 
these cities.

AMY GOODMAN: And, Gigi, what about the effect that the water in the 
plastic bottle has? Is there any kind of leeching out? People think 
that they're getting healthier water in all sorts of ways, but what 
about the impact of that plastic?

GIGI KELLETT: Well, there are a number of concerns about the impact 
of the plastic, yes, of course, in the leeching. These bottles that 
are made are single-serve bottles, so they're not intended to be 
reused, because of the potential for leeching of the plastic into -- 
when you're drinking the water. And then, of course, there are the 
environmental impacts of the bottles that are ending up in our 
landfills and on the side of the road as litter. They're not being 
recycled. Only about 23 percent of these plastic bottles are being 
recycled. So it's a huge impact for our environment and, of course, 
for people's health. So we want people to be looking at turning back 
to the tap and thinking outside the bottle.

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news 
program, Democracy Now!

© 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/58604/

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