Walmart’s customer service got so overloaded with calls from Food & Water Watch activists this morning — their phone lines got temporarily shut down. We can see why. In just two hours, activists from the VERY committed Food & Water Watch supporter list got busy calling Walmart — over 900 times in just two hours.
Walmart was able to restore its telephone service and our activists are continuing towards our goal of 2000 calls in this National Call-in Day to fight genetically engineered (GE) sweet corn.
Customer service representatives report that they are getting a lot of calls on this issue. It’s no surprise. People don’t want GE corn. Here’s why:
Give Walmart an earful of activism (instead of corn!). It’s so easy to do, even people on Facebook are talking about it. Call now to help us reach 2,000 calls by 5:00 PM EST.
If you’ve already taken action, take a breather — for now. There will be plenty to do in the coming weeks on this important food safety issue. Meanwhile entertain yourself with the antics of Big Box Mama and GE Seed King. It’s not like any Food & Water Watch campaign you’ve seen before.
By Eve Mitchell
The new year has brought two significant developments for GM crops in the EU. BASF has pulled all R&D aimed at European markets and moved their operations to the U.S., and Monsanto has pulled sales of their GM MON810 maize from France.
BASF’s GM crop prospects in Europe suffered a serious blow in 2010 when the first ever planting of its flagship Amflora GM potato, designed to produce industrial starch, had to be destroyed when it emerged the seed stock was contaminated with an unauthorised GM potato. Caching up with what Europeans have known all along, a BASF spokesperson was reported to say, “It does not make business sense to continue investing in products exclusively for cultivation in this market.” The company clearly thinks it will have better luck selling its GM food in the U.S. — where there are no labels to tell consumers what they are buying.
Monsanto’s withdrawal of MON810 was more of a surprise. After all, the company had recently won a case at the EU Court of Justice against the ongoing French ban on cultivation. The French Government vowed to correct its administrative oversights and reinstate the ban, and Monsanto must have felt it wasn’t worth the fight – or perhaps didn’t want the renewed scrutiny of the crop the French would ignite so decided on a tactical retreat.
Either way Europeans are a step or two closer to the GM-free food and farming we want. Now all we have to do is clean up the problems the limited GM crops we’ve already grown and still causing for people like beekeepers.
Watch our executive director, Wenonah Hauter, talk at TEDx Manhattan about the abuses suffered by poultry farmers like Valerie Ruddle — and why we need to continue the fight for a fair farm bill.
First there was Bennifer. Then came Brangelina and TomKat. Now the latest “it” couple is Walsanto. And we’ve got the inside scoop you want on their budding romance.
Sure, this isn’t something you expect to hear from us here at Food & Water Watch, but even we like to do a little celebrity stalking every once in a while — especially if said celebrities are none other than Walmart and Monsanto, the stars of our current campaign. Check out their unfolding love story on our favorite new gossip site, Walsanto Watch!
It turns out that Monsanto is seeking a retail “mate” to sell his latest science experiment, GE sweet corn, and make his fortune doing it. After being turned down by Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods and General Mills, he is setting his sights on the industrial food darling Walmart.
Will she be convinced that his affection (and pocketbook) is enough, or will he once again be left alone with nothing but his GE sweet corn to keep him company? “Like” the Walsanto Watch Facebook page to keep up with the latest developments in this sordid love story.
Over the next two months, we’ll keep working hard to prevent Monsanto’s GE sweet corn from reaching Walmart’s shelves. But, while we’re organizing call-in days and collecting petitions in the field, we’ll also be using social media to raise awareness about the campaign.
Thanks for joining in the fun!
By Kate Fried
Unless you’ve been ignoring all forms of media recently, you’re no doubt aware of the Komen Foundation’s little snafu around funding for Planned Parenthood. Following a barrage of bad PR and a backlash in social media they eventually reversed their decision. What made this flip-flop possible of course was the mass outcry that emanated from the general public, aka the grassroots.
We here at Food & Water Watch know a thing or two about the possibilities for social change that can be realized when a major news development ignites people to take action on an issue that matters to them. That is after all, what we do—we organize the voices of concerned citizens into movements to protect our shared essential resources, improving all of our lives as a result.
When people ask me what I like most about working for Food & Water Watch, I don’t tell them I’m in it for the reusable water bottles, although that is a nice perk. Instead, I usually tell them, tongue firmly planted in cheek, that being a part of our work satisfies my innate need to fight “the man.” Of course I’m joking, but you get the gist of what I mean. While activism is sometimes dismissed as soap boxing, people like you and me do have the ability to change bad policies. The Komen controversy reminds us of that, but it’s nothing new. If you’re reading this, you may have played a role in some of the victories that Food & Water Watch has achieved over the past few years such as convincing Starbucks to stop using milk produced with artificial growth hormones, halting several bottled water plants throughout the United States and passing dozens of local measures against hydraulic fracturing, just to name a few.
The fact is, grassroots activism works. So the next time you’ve turned off the evening news in a fit of depression at the state of the world and its leadership, don’t just get sad and move to Canada— do something.
Case in point— you can join Walsanto Watch, our new campaign exposing Walmart’s flirtation with Monsanto GE sweet corn, which will be unfolding on Facebook and Twitter over the coming weeks. Meanwhile, we’ll still be right here, doing what we’ve always done—keeping you abreast of the latest efforts to protect our most essential resources, and giving you ways to get involved too. Keep up the good work.
By Kate Fried
While I’ve been writing about water privatization for almost four years now, it sometimes still seems to me like an extremely abstract issue. Sure, I know that private water companies tend to raise consumer rates, scrimp on customer service, and downsize their work forces. But how often do I meet consumers who have been personally affected by the problems inflicted by private water companies? Not terribly often. Yes, perhaps I should get out more.
Therefore, when a series of emails floated through my inbox detailing some of the frustrations that customers of Aqua America and its subsidiaries have encountered in recent months, my attention was piqued because they connected the problems of privatization to actual humans. Join me as I introduce you to a few of them and their water woes.
Meet Ruby Williams. Ms. Williams, a 78-year-old Aqua Pennsylvania customer, gained nation attention not long ago for being hit with a $40,000 water bill after a leak left her plumbing lines gushing more water than it takes to fill an Olympic-sized swimming pool. The leak occurred on the side of her water line that Aqua Pennsylvania does not claim responsibility for, so instead of offering solutions for resolving it, they sent her a bill that rivaled the cost of tuition at a private university and offered to set her up on an installment plan. Only after Ms. Williams’ situation garnered national media attention, and only after a county social services agency began collecting donations to help her pay her bill did the company agree to reduce her bill to hundreds of dollars instead of tens of thousands.
Now meet the Price family of Stallings, North Carolina. Aqua North Carolina recently cut off their wastewater service despite the fact that they had paid their bill, and then demanded $1000 to restore it. According to state regulators, the actual cost should have been $645–still a hefty price, but about a third less than what Aqua asked. Luckily, the state intervened, and the company restored their service at no charge. An investigation is now underway.
Finally, meet the residents of Newlin Greene, a subdivision of Newlin Township in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Residents there are facing a drinking water bill increase less than a year after their provider Aqua Pennsylvania raised sewer rates by 60 percent. They are already paying nearly $2000 a year for sewer service on average, and if the company gets it way, they will ending up paying more than $1000 a year for water service. That’s a total of about $3000 a year for water and sewer service. Ouch.
Not long ago, presidential contender Mitt Romney opined “corporations are people,” but the experience of these Aqua America subsidiary customers suggests that some corporations are not people who should be trusted with our valuable water resources, nor should they necessarily be invited into our homes. After all, what would you do if your life and your wallet were turned inside out by one of these companies?
by Chris Hunt
When I first met Carole Morison in 2006, she and her family operated an industrial poultry facility on the Delmarva Peninsula where they’d been raising chickens under contract with agri-giant, Perdue, for two decades. In her spare time, Carole was an outspoken critic of factory farming, a staunch advocate for farmworkers’ rights and an effective organizer intent on exposing the ills of the industrial livestock production system in which she was so deeply involved.
Purdue couldn’t stand Carole. I liked her immediately.
It was clear to me from the start that Carole wasn’t a follow-the-crowd sort of person; indeed, she demonstrates the classic characteristics that make the American farmer great: fierce independence combined with a strong dedication to community, a steadfast commitment to justice and the unwavering resolve to voice her beliefs.
In 2008, Carole was featured prominently in Food, Inc. In it, she described her experience as a contract poultry producer, telling one of the most compelling – and heart-wrenching – stories included in the landmark film. The same year, Purdue terminated the Morisons’ contract, leaving them with empty single-purpose industrial poultry barns in which they’d already invested hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The American farmer has always been known for the ability to solve problems through prudence, resourcefulness and innovation – and Carole Morison is no exception. Ultimately, she and her husband repurposed one of their old industrial chicken barns and transitioned the facility into a humane, sustainable farm for laying hens.
But the American farmer has always been known for ingenuity and the ability to solve problems through prudence, resourcefulness and innovation – and Carole Morison is no exception. Ultimately, she and her husband repurposed one of their old industrial chicken barns and transitioned the facility into a humane, sustainable farm for laying hens. The fruit of their labor, Bird’s Eye View Farm, was recently certified as the first Animal Welfare Approved farm on the Delmarva Peninsula.
An effective shift from the industrial food system of the past to the sustainable model of the future will require widespread implementation of exactly this sort of agricultural transition. Ultimately, Carole’s is a story of hope and triumph, not just for the Morisons and sustainable food advocates, but for all of us.
In this Our Heroes podcast, Carole discusses her own transition to sustainable agriculture, the challenges currently facing other industrial producers hoping to make similar transitions, the impact of her involvement in Food, Inc.and the joys of raising Rhode Island Red hens.
Listen to the 34-minute interview by clicking on the audio player (above left), download as a podcast or read a PDF transcript. Find an excerpt from the interview below.
You can learn more about Carole’s transition to sustainable egg production (along with her outstanding insights into the food system) by reading her blog, Food for Thought.
We raised chickens under contract for an international corporation for 23 years. It was industrial production… I married into it. When I first started, I was under the impression that that’s the only way you raise chickens. Throughout the adventure of raising the chickens under contract, it became more and more evident that there were a lot of things wrong with the whole system of industrial production. And that kind of led me to speak out about the industry practices… I didn’t like what we were doing, and chickens were like a number. We just counted flock after flock of chickens.
So that led me to speak out about things: environmental issues, public health issues, worker issues. I mean, the industry is just rampant with all kinds of issues and it’s a system that I finally came to understand is not sustainable. I think the biggest problem is that there is no care about how the animals are raised, how they go to market, just as long as we mass produce. There is no concern for the farmers, or the workers, or their welfare; they’re just another cog in the wheel that’s going to move these chickens to market… And to me, it’s driven by greed. The corporations that dominate the industry, their bottom line is the dollar, and nothing else matters… There were really no scruples or morals within when it pertained to anything. I think that’s what bothered me the most, was the lack of care for anything.
Between 2010 and 2011, I had the opportunity to see a lot of different ways of farming. And you know, it started giving me ideas. Well, maybe we could do this on the farm, or maybe we could do that on the farm. We wanted to do meat – chicken, pasture raised. However, the infrastructure here on the Delmarva Peninsula doesn’t exist to support independent production; everything is owned by industry… So then we came up with the idea of laying hens. There is not a lot to the processing; we do everything right here on the farm. And transportation – we’re working that out now; we’re going to piggyback with someone who is hauling another load to where our market is. And that way we can cut down on costs.
We were able to retool one of the chicken houses using some of the equipment that was already in there. The major thing was taking off the curtains that were on the sides; they were what they call “dark-out curtains,” which made everything inside really dark. So we took them off and put clear on so the chickens have fresh sunlight and air all the time, unless it’s really cold out. But they still have the sunlight with the clear curtains, which I love.
And we cut access doors so that the chickens could roam in and out freely as they want to during the day. We do put them up at night for predator control; we have a lot of foxes here. So yeah; it was fairly simple. First I kind of looked at it as a real daunting task, but it was fairly simple to do.
Definitely…We’ve already had farmers come to visit individually and take a look at what we’re doing. Yes, there’re definitely farmers out there who would like to get out of the system they’re in. And right now they’re stuck simply because, like I mentioned earlier, there’s no infrastructure to help the independent farmer or that the independent farmer can use. There’re no government programs that the farmer can go through to get up and running, and there’re just a whole lot of roadblocks there.
I think it made me seek out answers instead of always pointing out the problems. For a long time, even before Food, Inc., I worked on problems within the poultry industry, whether they were environmental, worker related, public health, whatever. However, after Food, Inc. and being in touch with so many different people around the country, it was kind of like, well, yeah, there’re problems there; they are not going away. But let’s see if we can’t find some solutions that will give both farmers and consumers choices, instead of being stuck in one system of producing food.
I think the biggest thing that people can do is to support their local farmer – your small farmer who is producing locally… And when you’re in the grocery store, if they are not carrying a product, talk to the manager in the grocery store and ask, “Why not?” Or say you’d like to see that product on the shelf. Consumer demand is what’s going to be the ultimate drive… And without the support from the community and the consumers, it’s not going to happen. That’s just point blank the way I see it…
The biggest thing that I’m hearing from potential buyers is that the supply can’t meet the demand. They need more farmers; they need more people producing food to be able to carry the local foods. So we need to find farmers. And I think there’re more and more people who are doing it, getting into it on a smaller basis. You can produce a lot on five acres, believe it or not. It doesn’t take hundreds or thousands of acres to be able to do it. So I just think that we’re going to see it moving forward, rapidly.
By Tim Schwab, Food Policy Researcher
Last week’s State of the Union Address found President Obama bragging about how few regulations he had implemented as president and how much support he’s going to continue offer the private sector. This sounds an awful lot like business as usual for the White House—promoting innovation at any cost, no matter the impact on human health and the environment.
Case in point: nanomaterials.
The National Research Council (NRC) released a long report last week identifying major gaps in environmental, health and safety research of nanomaterials. Its conclusion: “Despite the promise of nanotechnology…the future of safe and sustainable nanotechnology-based materials, products, and processes is uncertain.”
This warning follows a growing body of science demonstrating potential dangers associated with nanomaterials—a new class of chemicals developed through shrinking the particle sizes of existing elements, like carbon and silver. Turns out that changing the size of particles radically changes their behavior, properties and risks.
Corporations have blithely embraced nanomaterials as the next big thing, embedding them in everything from cutting boards to cosmetics to food itself. Unregulated, unmonitored and unlabeled, these nanomaterials may be lurking in your own home.
More than 50 scientists collaborated on the NRC report, which highlights a lack of public knowledge about how nanomaterials are being used by industry. The report also underlines the need for more and better science on how to monitor and test the safety of these materials.
The report identifies a serious gap – missing research on the effects of ingested nanomaterials on human health. Food processors are using nanomaterials in an attempt to tinker with the color and nutritional content of food (like shrinking fat molecules of cream used in ice cream) and to preserve and package it (like coating fresh produce with a thin nano-wax to keep it fresh).
The scope of nanomaterials in our food system is unknown. Even the National Organic Program, which sets the rules that govern the USDA organic label, is having an ongoing debate about whether food processors should be allowed to use nanomaterials.
The NRC is calling for the U.S. government to spend an additional $24 million a year for the next five years to fill in some critical gaps in environmental, health and safety data. This relatively small expenditure of money could yield important information that could help policy makers and regulators understand the behavior of nanomaterials, according to the NRC.
But understanding the risks is only part of the problem. We also need rules and regulations that protect consumers from these risks. The regulations that do exist for chemicals aren’t being rigorously applied to nanomaterials and are largely ill-equipped to do so. We need new rules to address these new risks.
The NRC has identified a clear need for more science and more understanding of nanoparticles, noting the possible dangers they pose to human health and the environment. In the absence of information regarding the danger of nanomaterials, government cannot simply give industry a free pass to do as it pleases. This appears especially germane to nanomaterials, which are often needlessly embedded in consumer products as a marketing gimmick. Check out this nano-silver fridge. Do we really need a nano-pesticide touching all of our food?
READ the Food & Water Watch report on nanotechnology here.
Download the Food & Water Watch report on nanotechnology here.
Whenever I hear the name Monsanto I can’t help but think about one of the greatest environmental crimes in the history of the United States. Back in 1935 Monsanto bought out a small chemical company located in Anniston, Alabama, a struggling town of about 22,000 poor and working class people. Monsanto spent the next 36 years using Anniston as its manufacturing headquarters for PCBs, an industrial coolant. Tragically, the company was also recklessly poisoning the local community, environment and its own workers with hundreds of tons of this highly toxic material.
For decades Monsanto used Snow Creek, a small local waterway that flowed past its plant, to dispose of PCBs. The company claims that they just didn’t know any better – that as soon as they became aware that PCBs were a human and environmental health problem, they took steps to stop the dumping and to protect local residents and workers. But as documents that the company was forced to turn over during a series of lawsuits that began in the late 1990’s show, their claimed ignorance of the harmful impacts of PCBs is just another in a long, ongoing list of Monsanto’s endless lies.
As early as 1938 Monsanto knew from researchers that PCBs caused liver damage in rats. In the 50’s they started to tell their own workers to wear protective clothing and respirators when working around PCBs, while at the same time they continued to dump their poisons out into the West Anniston community. In 1966, Monsanto hired a Mississippi State University biologist to dunk fish into Snow Creek. The study found that “all 25 fish lost equilibrium and turned on their sides in 10 seconds and all were dead in 3 ½ minutes,” their skin broken and bleeding. The fact the Creek was lethal didn’t stop Monsanto. By 1969 the company was pouring 250 pounds of PCBs a day into the creek that feed into the area’s drinking water supply and which many local residents, including children, used for fishing, playing and recreating. That year, Monsanto researchers found fish in the local community fishing spot with PCB levels 7,500 times the legal limit. A company memo concluded, “there is little object in going to expensive extremes in limiting discharges.” Instead, Monsanto executives enlisted state officials to try and “handle the problem quietly without release of the information to the public.”
Monsanto’s toxic legacy continues to date – there’s never been a proper cleanup. Many of the people who live in West Anniston today are told to wear masks when cutting their grass; their children are told not to kick up any dirt when playing in the yards for fear of breathing in carcinogenic dust left by behind by Monsanto after they packed up and moved out.
Unfortunately, Monsanto’s reprehensible conduct in Anniston was simply a precursor for its current diabolical deeds. What the company did, and is still doing, to the people of West Anniston underscores a corporation devoid of any decency and honesty. Throughout the world they have continued to engage in false adverting, bribery, cover-ups, threats, deceit and outright illegal business practices. Sadly, perhaps its worst is yet to come.
Today, Monsanto is busy trying to commandeer the world’s crop supply through the development, patenting and sale of genetically modified plant seeds and food products, or Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). If Monsanto gets its way, virtually every consumable plant on the earth – every soy bean, ear of corn and kernel of wheat -will have the company’s brand of ownership burned into it. And there isn’t any twisted tactic the company won’t employ to obtain its greedy goal of controlling our food sources. They’ve bribed governmental officials, threatened media outlets, intimidated researchers and crushed local farms with frivolous patent lawsuits.
Monsanto’s latest effort in its quest for world food domination is GMO sweet corn. A 2010 study in the International Journal of Biological Sciences links Monsanto’s GMO corn to liver failure in rats. Monsanto, of course, discounts the study in the same way it purposefully ignored the 1938 PCB study that showed liver failure in rats. Seems as if a biotech company like Monsanto should have a little more respect for science, but not when it impacts their massive profits. Despite indicators that GMO corn will have many serious human and environmental health impacts, Monsanto’s lobbyists convinced USDA to approve it for human consumption, so now Monsanto has permission to peddle its contaminated corn to us. It’s in negotiations with Walmart, the largest grocery retailer in the country, to carry the corn throughout its US stores.
The ironic tragedy is that if they’re successful, Monsanto will be returning to Anniston, Alabama to the Walmart Supercenter on McClellan Blvd. to continue the job it started in 1936, poisoning the people of a town that has already suffered enough.
Act now to tell Walmart, “Reject Monsanto GE Corn!”
By Rich Bindell
When we last checked in with our friends in Dimock, Pennsylvania, some unlikely heroes were delivering a truck full of drinking water. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP) had determined that Cabot Oil and Gas was no longer responsible to provide water to families affected by contamination. In so doing, PA DEP seemed to send the message that they were protecting Cabot more than the environment or local citizens. Thankfully, the EPA stepped in to investigate, and they determined that the well water of four of the eleven families contained dangerous contaminants. Now the EPA is in the water delivery business. Welcome to Frackville.
The fact that the EPA felt obligated to provide drinking water to four Dimock families was a victory for residents who have been without safe drinking water since November 30, 2011. Since that time, the families have relied upon environmental organizations and sympathetic mayors to provide them with safe water for drinking, bathing and other household uses. A federal agency made the right call, even if the state agency in pro-fracking Pennsylvania couldn’t take responsibility for the contamination.
While Cabot Oil and Gas continues to deny that their operations are the cause of the contamination, the facts might reveal a different story in due time. Cabot has been drilling in Dimock, near to the victim’s properties, and while the contaminants found in their water are certainly not natural to the area, they are often associated with fracking.
And this certainly isn’t limited to Dimock. Some residents in Butler, Pennsylvania could be next on the EPA’s delivery route. If fracking is allowed to continue, will the EPA become a bottled water delivery service?
If the EPA hadn’t stepped in and taken the time to conduct a proper investigation, this story could have ended differently. Meanwhile, every week reveals new information about fracking’s negative impacts. We’re learning the hard way. If we had put research and study before rapid industrial expansion, fracking might not be the cause of so many harmful events.

Honoring Moms: Eileen Morris, a Food and Water Watch volunteer and mother, participates in one of Food & Water Watch's "Sowing the Seeds" events.
For Mother’s Day, we decided to highlight one of our volunteers. Eileen Morris of Chico, California, is an activist and mother. Here, she talks about her work with Food & Water Watch.
Almost two years ago, I connected to Food & Water Watch by going to a friend’s birthday party. There, I was introduced to Noelle Ferdon, a senior organizer at Food & Water Watch. I felt drawn to the work of the organization; it strongly reflected many of my own changed levels of political awareness and lifestyle over the last 15-20 years. I asked Noelle to be a guest speaker for my classes at California State University – Chico, where I am an instructor in political science and government. I stayed connected to the work of Food & Water Watch and just recently hosted a Sowing the Seeds for a Fair Farm Bill event.
I have long held the belief that evil is what happens when good people do nothing, to paraphrase an Edmund Burke quote.
This connects to my thoughts on motherhood.
I owe my children and grandchildren (my older daughter has given me two lovely grandsons), which is why I do the work I do. I couldn’t live with myself if I didn’t act on the issues that are critical now. I have to imagine that a day could come when children turn to us and ask, “How could you have done nothing about the pressing water and food issues we have today?” Maybe I don’t get all the change I want, when I want it, but I know that no act is wasted, and so I must act.
I can see also that, as a mother, I play a strong role in socializing my own children in many ways, including to political activism. But I also convey to them that a public life is about sacrifice as well. For instance we may take an otherwise nice weekend relaxing at home and instead go out with family to collect signatures or stand in the cold and rain protesting with my students about the budget cuts to education.
I hope for my children that they find their political voice. They will find the problems of their day on their own, I think. I hope they can learn from me that they must act and seize the power we still have to act on the issues they care about and that they know the power of their own choices.
I want to continue the important work of challenging the corporate control of food and similar corporate takeovers of all other important institutions of our lives such as our government and policy process. Local and regional food systems need to be strengthened through the work of organizations like Food & Water Watch. We must continue to support farmers and local economies as individual consumers and through the policy process.
Specifically, through FWW, I have been active within California on the issue of labeling for genetically engineered (GE) salmon. Locally, I’ve just learned about a movement to gather signatures to qualify a ballot initiative in California to label any products made with GE foods.
And so I continue to fight the good fight!
-Eileen Morris, Mother, Grandmother and Activist
Join Food & Water Watch and Eileen in working for a Fair Farm Bill.
It’s not everyday that a bottled water company is potentially caught up in a military junta or close to getting kicked out of a country. But, lately Fiji Water seems to give up the drama like Jersey Shore at T-shirt Time. Whether it’s the commodification of a natural resource that belongs to the people in the Republic of the Fiji Islands or their external affairs director being accused of interfering in Fiji government business, Fiji Water seems to be a company on the brink of permanent political incorrectness and, perhaps, even extinction.
In early December, Fiji Water Company purchased Justin Vineyards and Winery in Paso Robles, California. For many, the acquisition symbolizes a move away from bottled water, which could potentially be due to decreasing sales in an industry whose image is becoming increasingly more controversial.
But, just before the New Year, a group of individuals filed a lawsuit against Fiji Water in Santa Ana, California for making false claims. The suit alleges that Fiji Water profited from claims that its bottled water products are carbon negative. Their website states that their products are carbon negative, but the company itself admitted that they hope to achieve this goal by 2037.
If the plaintiffs prevail, it would seem to add insult to injury as far as we’re concerned. Fiji Water’s commodification of a natural resource — one to which many Fijians don’t have access — is bad enough. If the bottled water company has been profiting from a false claim in the name of bluewashing, it certainly sets the bar for a new low in an industry that’s already not winning any legitimate environmental awards, unless you count the ones they give to themselves.
Fiji Water’s parent company, Roll International Corp., isn’t exactly short on cash. But, their recent troubles, specifically the controversy on Fiji Island and the current lawsuit, could potentially have one positive outcome: getting Fiji Water both out of Fiji and out of the water business — for good.
-Rich Bindell
Bottled water (fiji and others) do not provide a viable, sustainable method of water distribution. We don’t wish ill on anyone but seriously, the impacts of bottled water on the environment are enormous and have gone on long enough. We need to stop buying bottled water from fiji as well as others. The consumer ultimately decides who is in business and who is not.
Tap water is great! There are a host of grocers who allow you to refill bottles and purchase water in the event you require filtered or reverse osmosis, etc…
Bottled water is a healthy alternative to carbonated soft drinks, and other sugared, artificially sweetened, and preservative laced beverages. It is a convenience item most of the time, taking much of its growth from soft drinks.
The impacts of bottled water on the environment are a diversion to the impact of all plastics in consumer goods. Does anyone pay attention to how many zip loc bags get used on a daily basis AND do not get recycled? Almost 33% of bottled water containers are recylced.
Lastly, tap water isn’t great. Google yourself contaminents in tap water, and you’ll soon learn there are a host of impurities in tap water including pharmaceuticals, Chromium 6, etc.
If you want to ingest unhealthy, or impurity ridden foods and beverages, you are free to do so. Let those who want something better exist in peace.
Governor Schwarzenegger isn’t the only celebrity weighing in on California’s water future. He may be promoting Proposition 18, a massive $11 billion water bond to help big agribusiness at the expense of essential services (see our Terminator video), but most Californians know the water bond is all wet. With Prop 18’s sagging poll numbers, the Governor and legislative leaders are trying to move the measure until 2012. We asked a few of our friends in Hollywood what they thought of the water bond and the prospect of postponing it for two years. They all had the same reaction: they spit in disgust. We captured it all on video!
Coined by its backers as the Safe, Clean and Reliable Drinking Water Supply Act, the only thing the $11 billion water bond is guaranteed to do is increase the state’s $19 billion deficit, leading to deeper cuts in education, healthcare, public safety and state park funding. It will also build new dams and lay the groundwork for a peripheral
canal around the San Joaquin River Delta. In reality, it should be named the Expensive, Dubious and Deceptive Corporate Subsidy Act.
To highlight the need to scrap rather than delay the water bond, Food & Water Watch teamed up with creative geniuses Nancy Hower and John Lehr who put together this clever spot featuring well known television personalities. The ad features David DeLuise from Wizards of Waverly Place, Anna Belknap of CSI: NY, Kelli Williams from Lie
to Me and formerly on The Practice, and Justine Bateman, best known for Family Ties.
“We love Food & Water Watch so much, we happily wiped our celebrities’ spit off the plexi-glass protecting the camera,” said Lehr. “We support keeping water publicly owned, pure, accessible and drinkable…straight from the tap. Proposition 18 is a massive waste of money and won’t help California’s future water needs.”
“I love water,” said David DeLuise. “Without it I would smell funny and be thirsty, and I might die.”
While the ad makes a serious point, it also had side benefits for some of the actors. Said Kelli Williams, “I have never in my life drunk that much water in one sitting. I was marvelously hydrated.”
The spot is part of the No on 18 campaign to scrap the water bond, rather than have it delayed until 2012. To take action and get involved, go to www.nowaterbond.com/spit. Help spread the word by sharing the video. Together we can work to stop this bond and get back to work on real solutions to California’s water future.
-Anna Ghosh
Eileen — thanks for ALL you do, the volunteering, the fighting for clean safe affordable food and water, the role-modeling for your children and to US. Happy Mother’s Day!
Royelen
Eileen! What a serendipitous meeting we had a couple years ago. You inspire me to fight the good fight and not get discouraged as the work I’m doing is reaching people. Happy Mother’s Day! Thank you for your commitment to being educated on issues and spreading that knowledge onto your children and your students.
Food and Water Watch, Royelen and Noelle, thank you! I just want to let you know how much I appreciate all of you! It is through this organization and collaboration that we all achieve our goals. Thanks for the Mother’s Day blog, it makes this a very special day for me!