"If Coke can pay for the ink to write 'crisp, fresh taste' on its Dasani bottles, it can certainly afford to print 'Public Water Source' on its bottles, too...There is no reason Coke cannot meet the bar Pepsi has set by agreeing to give consumers basic information about the source of its water," says Kellett, as reported on a recent press release on prnewswire.
In fact, there is a national day of action being held to ask Coke to disclose its source for water for its Dasani brand bottled water.
The day of action is being led by Corporate Accountability International and its regional partners. Coke has worked to block public knowledge of its water source.
Pepsi, Coke's largest rival company, has recently agreed to print on their Aquafina water bottles the source. Also, Coke is not complying with a request to make public a report the health and quality the same way that public water systems are required to. Last week Consumers International gave a Bad Product award to Dasani, stating the (dis)honor was due to "pushing marketing into the realms of the ridiculous" for packaging water that came from the same source as tap water.
Tony Clarke, director of the Polaris Institute and author of Blue Gold said, "The reality is corporations, like Coke, create a market for their products by casting doubt on the quality of tap water. Bottled water is, in fact, subject to less regulatory scrutiny and, in the case of Dasani, comes from the same source."
The situation of bottled water has been getting much attention of late. Aside from recycling concerns, the companies that sell bottled water have been called upon to answer questions about their product and its source that make many of these companies not want to cooperate. In fact, just last month, October of 2007, mayors, restaurant owners, celebrities, faith groups, students, and national organizations launched the Think Outside the Bottle Pledge.
This pledge urges individuals to cease buying bottled water and instead drink water from the tap. NBC Nightly News has deemed this action a "growing movement" to think outside the bottle.
If you'd like more information about the situation concerning bottled water, and Coke's resistance to comply with the aforementioned requests, you may contact Nick Guroff of Corporate Accountability International by phone at: (617) 695-2525, or email him at: nguroff@stopcorporateabuse.org.
Source:
Consumers demand Coke reveal water source
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/11-06-2007/0004699283&EDATE=
Published by Chloe Logan
Chloe Logan is here just to sound off, mostly. View profile
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4 Comments
Post a CommentDasani is tap water and it contains bromate, a suspected carcinogen... The term carcinogen refers to any substance, radionuclide or radiation that is an agent directly involved in the promotion of cancer or in the increase of its propagation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dasani
Idc...
Having researched this subject extensively when I worked as a small business development center, I can say without hesitation that you would really be surprised where some of that so called fresh, clear, spring water comes from. Dasani wasn't the first and won't be the last to pull this con.
It's cool that more people are waking up to the con that bottled water is.