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瓶裝水  

有在喝瓶裝水嗎? 可曾想過水是誰的? 政府幫我們鋪設水管, 淨化自來水, 所以我們要繳水費; 感覺水資源是國有, 尚可接受. 如果水資源私有化是屬於企業的呢? 可接受嗎?

 

 

雀巢就正在這麼鼓吹水資源應私有化, 最好能劃歸他們企業的. 甚至堂而皇之在巴基斯坦就挖起地下水. 雀巢旗下好幾支耳熟能詳的瓶裝水品牌, 像Perrier, Evian等等. 消費者花自來水兩千倍的價錢去買這類瓶裝水, 它的組成成分有25%以上還是自來水, 無論就付費, 實質健康, 青春容顏, 或環保層面, 如果仔細去想, 都還....蠻不可理喻的. 但居然能成立那麼多事業體, 賺進大把鈔票. 喝完的塑膠瓶丟棄, 大地要花多少時間才能消化得掉

 

我在賣場看到Evian最新的展示視覺, 嬰兒與成年男女的對比, 意思是喝了以後會像嬰兒一般的紅潤肌膚. 這種天大謊話(不叫行銷話術), 以前的我是會相信的. ...呵呵呵

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台灣也蠻多礦泉水品牌, 怎樣算礦泉水? 自然湧泉, 含微量元素. 認證? GMP HACCP ISO 美國 FDA 食品認証廠。經過食安風暴 這些標章照理都信用破產, 也沒人重提這些專業認證??? 另外還有綠色健康食品認證, 上次不知誰提出有些吃的東西根本很甜, 還能通過健康食品認證, 也是個神話

 

Why You Should Boycott Nestlé Water and All Its Other Brands: Foodie Underground

 

Column Drink Nestlé water, or any other bottled water for that matter? Stop. Now.

In a world where food has become political, it’s easy to forget that there’s something even more essential than food: water.

 

Water is after all what helps our food grow; not only do we need to drink it, but so do the plants that we consume everyday. Without water, we have nothing.

 

The severity of the drought in California has put the water crisis at the forefront of our minds, but it’s nothing new. Over the last century, water use has grown at more than twice the rate of population increase, and by 2025, approximately 1.8 billion people will suffer from water scarcity. Water is an issue that we must take seriously.

 

 

In the face of such an issue, it seems near insanity that companies would profit off of water. The corporate face of water privatization is of course Nestlé. As the owner of a handful of water brands, like Poland Spring, Pellegrino, Perrier and Evian, Nestlé dominates the bottled water market.

 

Consumers spend up to 2,000 times the price of tap water to drink out of a bottle. And when an estimated 25 percent of all bottled water is actually tap water, I think we can all agree that a bottled water habit is simply idiotic.

 

But in the mind of the corporations, it’s their right to make money off of water. Nestlé CEO Peter Brabeck has publicly come under scolding for his comments back in 2013 in regards to water rights. “Water is of course the most important raw material we have today in the world. It’s a question of whether we should privatize the normal water supply for the population. And there are two different opinions on the matter. The one opinion, which I think is extreme, is represented by the NGOs, who bang on about declaring water a public right. That means as a human being you should have a right to water. That’s an extreme solution. And the other view says water is a foodstuff like any other. And like any other foodstuff it should have a market. Personally I think it’s better to give foodstuff a market value…”

 

While that might sound like extreme thinking, it’s definitely in line with Nestlé’s global push to privatize water sources. In Pakistan, Nestlé has been accused of draining groundwater levels and affecting local health in order to bottle Pure Life, a bottled water brand marketed as a healthy option for families. What’s so healthy about drinking contaminated groundwater because the levels are so low? At the World Water Forum in 2000, Nestlé successfully lobbied to keep water from being declared a universal human right (Nestlé defines water as a “need”).

 

If you think that’s appalling, check out The Story of Stuff Project that made the fantastic video on bottled water back in 2010 and has recently launched a campaign against Nestlé and the privatization of water.

 

As Nestlé lays claim to 700 million gallons of water in thirsty California, the corporation’s leadership publicly holds that it is providing a benefit to people. With five bottling facilities in California, Nestlé claims to run its own operation because “people need to drink water.” But that’s a benefit that really only benefits the company, financially speaking, and for the citizens of California, means drawing from its groundwater, an act that is unfortunately goes unregulated by the government. In fact, Nestlé Waters North America’s CEO Tim Brown said in a public radio interview, “If I stop bottling water tomorrow, people would buy a different brand of bottled water. We see this everyday. In fact, if I could increase [bottling], I would.” It seems nothing, not even a debilitating drought, will make Nestlé stop.

 

Boycotting Nestlé is of course one option, and you might be surprised at what brands that fall under the Nestlé umbrella. Time to kick your PowerBar habit, athletes. Got a Nespresso maker? Time to ditch that as well, sorry George (although, I don’t know why you are drinking capsule coffee in the first place). Also, you should probably stop feeding your dog Purina Dog Chow.

 

The other option, and the simplest one which you can implement on an everyday basis, is to boycott bottled water, of all brands. All things considered, when we live in countries where access to clean, potable water is as easy as turning on the tap, there is no excuse for drinking bottled water. None.

 

 

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