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Tag Archive | "water"

World Water Week summit held in Stockholm


Fiji-water-shortageFor the past week, an international entourage of industry leaders, politicians, and officials from the United Nations have been meeting in Stockholm for the annual World Water Week summit. The purpose of this event was to improve access to clean water in communities across the globe in a bid to slow the high number of deaths each year in poor developing nations. Read the full story

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Greenland considers selling its glaciers for fancy water


strokkurCanadians will soon be drinking water that originated in Greenland now that the government has granted permission to a Canadian company to pursue a plan to fish for ice from its glaciers. Iceberg Canada Corporation will soon begin exploring ways to harvest ice from the Qoqqup Sermia glacier near Narsaq and the Narsap Sermia glacier near Nuuk; and if the government likes their proposal they will get the green light. Read the full story

Posted in Canada, Environment, Greenland, MBL, SocietyComments (11)

Swedish beaches flunk EU quality tests


baltic1The European Commission’s yearly report on the quality of Europe’s beaches has revealed that eight Swedish swimming areas did not meet the minimum water quality standards in 2008. Even so, the news isn’t all bad since the EU tested the water at 212 freshwater beaches and 258 coastal beaches in Sweden, and only eight failed. Read the full story

Posted in Environment, European Union, MBL, Sweden, TravelComments (0)

A taste of Greenland coming to the mineral water market


waterSwiss-based drinking water company, Greenland Spring Water received its long-awaited green light from the local government to begin processing and bottling mineral water from deep within the island of Greenland. Read the full story

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Helsinki’s tap water system coming back online


WaterFinland’s capital Helsinki usually gets its tap water from Lake Paijanne via the world’s longest water supply tunnel. But for the past eight months, the capital has been drinking water from the murky Vantaa River as workers have renovated the Paijanne Water Tunnel. Read the full story

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Environmental frustration over failed bottled water tax in Fiji


Water in FijiThe Fiji government’s decision to repeal a proposed tax on bottled water has revived concerns that bottled water companies in Fiji are continuing to deplete the islands’ natural resources.

The Finance Minister Mahendra Chaudhry announced a 20 cent per litre tax on bottled water exported from the country in early July. The impetus behind the tax was to conserve the islands’ natural resources in a country where many people still suffer from contaminated water.

“Mineral water is a scare resource, which will deplete and a fair share of returns has to be passed on to the nation,” said Mr. Chaudhry. He said that “it was about time that water bottling companies pay duty for using Fiji’s mineral water resource”, reported Fiji Village news.

A BBC Panorama investigation in February showed that one third of Fijians do not have access to clean drinking water and many were falling ill and dying from typhoid and other diseases linked to dirty water.

The bottled water tax was proposed to correct this imbalance by stimulating the conservation of water whilst at the same time increasing government revenue.

However, the tax was dropped after pressure from the powerful water bottling lobby which said that the industry would be forced to close, resulting in hundreds of job losses.

The bottled water industry in Fiji accounts for over $150 million per year and employs more than 700 people.

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Fiji exports luxury mineral water despite chronic water shortages


Water in FijiA third of the population of Fiji does not have access to clean drinking water, a BBC investigation has revealed.

The report, for its Panorama documentary series, showed how many Fijians are falling ill and dying from typhoid and other diseases caused by a lack of safe, clean water.

The irony is that the South Pacific islands have a flourishing bottled water industry, worth over $150 million per year and employing around 700 people. Bottles of Fiji natural mineral water are a common sight in restaurants and on supermarket shelves across the US and Europe, and have been featured on a number of popular televisions shows.

In early July the Fijian government announced a tax on bottled water designed to conserve the island’s depleting natural resources, but it was forced to abort the project last week following pressure from the powerful water bottling lobby group.

The bottling companies subsequently halted operations and closed down factories, saying they could no longer operate effectively operate their businesses with the new tax.

The interim government’s finance minister Mahendra Chaudhry said the tax was not new and had been imposed in other countries to generate revenue in a similar fashion. “The bottled water companies do not have to observe this [tax], they can pass it to the consumers,” he said.

The protests were set to cost the country up to $3million in lost export revenue each week, forcing the government to drop the tax proposal last Friday.

For more information on the debate surrounding bottled water and the BBC Panorama investigation, visit http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/panorama/7247130.stm

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The bottled water industry that leaves a third of Fijians with dirty water


Water in FijiThe government in Fiji has backed down from plans to introduce a 20 cents / litre tax on bottled water designed to curb the tide of luxury mineral water leaving the country for consumers abroad.

Bottled mineral water from Fiji is a multi-million dollar industry, generating over $150 million in revenue per year and employing over 700 people. Despite the abundance of Fijian bottled water on supermarket shelves in the US and Europe, one third of inhabitants on the south Pacific islands still live without access to clean drinking water.

The findings were revealed as part of a BBC Panorama investigation into the controversy surrounding the bottled water industry. It also showed that many Fijians were falling ill and dying of typhoid and other diseases related to contaminated water.

The Fijian government, whilst acknowledging the problem, had announced plans in early July to tax the export of bottled water, saying that water bottling companies should pay duty for exploiting the country’s limited supply of natural resources.

“Mineral water is a scare resource which will deplete, and a fair share of returns has to be passed on to the nation,” said interim finance minister Mahendra Chaudhry.

The tax was later scrapped after weeks of pressure from the water bottling companies who said the Fiji would stand to lose approximately $3million in export revenue each week whilst they halted operations in protest over the new tax.

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Fiji government yields to bottled water company pressure


Water in FijiA proposed tax on bottled water in Fiji has been scrapped following pressure by an industry lobby group on the island.

The interim Fijian government repealed its 20 cents per litre tax on bottled water following the factory closure of Fiji Water, the last of the bottled water companies to stop operations after the cabinet introduced the new taxation system.

Bottled water companies on the South Pacific island have welcomed the move. According to Fiji One News, the Fiji Bottled Water Institute, which represents nine companies, has said that consultations need to be held first on any future tax proposals before they are implemented.

Industry spokesman Jay Dayal said, “We are very pleased that at least the prime minister and attorney general intervened in the matter and resolved the whole issue. And now the bottlers will get together with the government and work out a form of compensation that is suitable to the government for the resource that we are extracting.”

Last year bottled water exports from Fiji counted for around $130 million, in an industry employing more than 700 people.

However, conservationists have pointed to the growing environmental costs associated with bottling water in Fiji. Typically plastic bottles are transported from China and then sent around the world to consumers in the United States and Europe.

A BBC Panorama documentary released earlier this year also highlighted the fact that a third of Fijians are still living without access to clean water. It showed that people were falling ill and dying of typhoid and other diseases related to contaminated water.

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Fiji Water shuts down factory in response to new bottling tax


Bottled water - FijiBottled water giant Fiji Water has closed operations following the interim government’s decision to levy a 20 cents per litre tax on all bottled water, reports the Fiji Times.

The closure follows other water companies based on the South Pacific islands of Fiji who say they can no longer operate under the new tax.

Fiji Water is the second-largest imported bottled water brand in the US and has not been exported since July 1st.

“We have had to stop the purchase of raw materials and have nearly exhausted our supply of empty containers to load. We have been left with no choice but to stop all production and have shut down our factory,” Fiji Water said in a statement.

Fiji Water, which is sold in upmarket stores and restaurants and has appeared in many popular television shows, has been at the centre of controversy surrounding the bottled water industry in Fiji.

In February, an investigation by BBC Panorama reported that one third of inhabitants on Fiji do not have access to clean drinking water, with many people falling ill or dying due to typhoid and other contaminated water diseases.

It also revealed that the source of Fiji Water in the Yaqara Valley was originally discovered with British aid money as part of a plan to find water for local people.

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