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Faulty claims: Water-neutrality

From March 1, most members of the trade organisations in Tamil Nadu stopped selling soft drinks made by multinational corporations. According to the trade bodies, the manufacturers of soft drinks waste a lot of water for making beverages. This is unacceptable to them since Tamil Nadu has been reeling under drought. Boycotting these products, according to them, will not only help drought-hit farmers in the state but also curb the excess use of water by soft drink manufacturers.

In January 2017, Tamil Nadu was declared drought-hit. Every district of the state was declared drought-hit, owing to the failure of the northeast monsoon in 2016 and reports of farmers' deaths, announced the then Chief Minister O Panneerselvam. About 144 farmers reportedly died in the state between October 1 and December 31, 2016, due to crop failure.

On March 2, 2017, the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court dismissed PILs against supply of water from the Thamirabarani River to co-packers of Pepsi and Coca-Cola. The petitioners had argued that agriculture is the main source of income for people in Tirunelveli and due to the supply of water to the companies, the agricultural activity and livelihood of the people was getting affected.

Media reports were stating that the idea of boycotting the sale of soft drinks was conceived during pro-jallikattu protests in January after it was claimed that the US-based People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) was responsible for the Supreme Court order on banning the bull-taming sport.

The protest is not new in Tamil Nadu. In April 2015, Coca-Cola had to scrap its plan for setting up a new bottling plant at Perundurai in Tamil Nadu following local protests. In November 2015, hundreds of villagers, who were against the drawing of water from the Thamirabarani River, protested in front of the SIPCOT Industrial Growth Centre in Gangaikondan village in Tirunelveli after the state government allowed PepsiCo to build a factory there.

How do beverage manufacturers defend themselves?

On August 25, 2015, a press release by the Coca-Cola and its bottling partners asserted that they are on track to meet 2020 water replenishment goal by the end of 2015. According to media reports, the company is replenishing about 94 per cent of the water used in its finished beverages based on 2014 sales volume. Between 2004 and 2015, Coca-Cola reportedly replenished about 153.6 billion litres of water through 209 community water projects in 61 countries.

The official website of Coca-Cola also stated, "Our systemwide water efficiency has improved for 13 consecutive years. When we started this journey in 2004, we were using 2.7 litres of water to make 1 litre of product. That means that 1 litre of water is in the product and another 1.7 litres is utilised in the manufacturing process, mostly for keeping equipment clean. Today, we are using 1.98 litres of water to make 1 litre of product, and we're working to reduce it to 1.7 litres of water per litre of product (a 25 per cent improvement) by 2020." However, the company has faced crises in India due to mismanagement of water resources.

Water-neutrality claim misleading on many fronts

Many of Coca-Cola's rainwater harvesting initiatives do not work because they are ill-maintained. The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), in a 2008 study, looked at Coca-Cola's operations in six areas, including Mehdiganj. It described Coca-Cola's rainwater harvesting structures as "dilapidated".

According to Amit Srivastava of the India Resource Center, the claim of water neutrality made by the beverage company is "misleading". He had substantiated his views in an article published in Global Research.

Water, according to him, is a local issue and the impact of aquifer depletion is borne by the local communities and farmers who depend upon it to meet their water needs. "When Coca-Cola extracts water from a depleted aquifer in Varanasi or Jaipur and replenishes an aquifer hundreds of miles away from the point of extraction, it doesn't help in reviving the local aquifer which the company depletes through bottling operations,' he adds.

Pointing out the strategy used by PepsiCo, Srivastava says, "The company is outsourcing water conservation measures and taking credit for it. It is certainly helping farmers in Maharashtra, Punjab and other states to buy technology for direct seeding—a methodology by which farmers save much water, but that doesn't absolve them from their responsibility of putting their house in order. They need to address the issue of excess water usage in their plants."

Amount of water used to manufacture beverages is much more than water used in bottling plants. "There are two ways that we (and Coca-Cola) look at water use. One is the simplistic manner in which the water that goes directly into the product at the point of production at the bottling plant. By this calculation, the company used 9 litres of water to make 1 litre of Coca-Cola in and around the year 2000. That was the time the first campaign against it for water abuses started. Today, Coca-Cola claims to have reduced this water use ratio in India to about 1.9 or so," says Srivastava.

According to him, the more meaningful way to assess the actual water consumption is to look at the water used in the life-cycle of the product. "The Water Footprint Network has measured the water footprint – which takes into account the water used in the life cycle of products. It has estimated that it takes 442 litres of water to make one litre of 'Sugar-Containing Carbonated Beverage' using cane sugar (which is the case in India), and 618 litres of water to make one litre of the same product using High Fructose Corn Syrup," Srivastava points out.

How is this assessment important? Srivastava has an answer: "This is particularly important in India because according to our calculations, Coca-Cola is the largest purchaser of sugar in the country. The point is if Coca-Cola did not buy all that sugar in India, would someone else buy it? We think not, and so Coca-Cola's procurement of sugar in India has to be factored in when looking at its water use."

(The views expressed are strictly those of Down to Earth.)

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