Campaign Group Launches Action Over Nestle Water Extraction In California


Campaign group The Story Of Stuff Project have just announced they will be pursuing legal action against the U.S. Forest Service for allowing Nestle to continue to extract groundwater in California, something which has been a key contributor to the State’s drought crisis.

Thanks to generous donations from a huge number of furious citizens, The Story Of Stuff Project was able to raise enough money to film a mini-documentary called ‘This land is our land’. It tells the story of Nestlé’s removal of millions of gallons of water from the San Bernardino National Forest- and it details evidence of unjustified activity by one of the world’s most unethical corporations.

The Story Of Stuff Project reports:

“While filming in southern California our team uncovered hard evidence that Nestlé has been operating outside the bounds of the law. When Nestlé’s permit to remove water expired 27 years ago, the U.S. Forest Service should have turned off the spigot. But instead, it has allowed Nestlé to continue operating unabated, in violation of the terms of its own permit.

“So to defend the public resources at stake we’ve joined with two great partners—Courage Campaign and the Center for Biological Diversity—to turn up the heat on Nestlé by filing a federal lawsuit challenging the company’s illegal occupation of these public lands.”

This is great news for campaigners and terrible news for Nestlé’s CEO, who is insane enough to believe that water is not a human right and should be privatized. Activists have already shut down a plant in California, and this is the next step in the fight against greed and corporate ecocide. Please share this (very moving) video to support the campaign, and if you are still buying bottled water, please stop!

This article was amended on 20 October to clarify that legal action will be taken against the U.S forestry service. An earlier version stated that Nestle would be sued. 


This article (Forest Service Being Sued to Stop Nestle from Drawing Water in National Forest) is free and open source. You have permission to republish this article under a Creative Commons license with attribution to the author and TrueActivist.com.

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