OSFR Op-Ed Cited in Palm Beach Post
…which, by the way, made a global profit of $10 billion last year. But here’s how it works. Nestle gets the water from Seven Springs Water Company, a local company…
…which, by the way, made a global profit of $10 billion last year. But here’s how it works. Nestle gets the water from Seven Springs Water Company, a local company…
…is a company called Seven Springs, which passes on the water to Nestlé, not Nestlé itself. It also misstated the cost to Nestlé for using the water. Nestlé purchases the…
…as a water withdrawal permit sought by Seven Springs/Nestlé for water bottling, now is the time for action. But SAFEBOR supporters have several obstacles to overcome before any new protections…
…the issuing the water use permit to Seven Springs, who will hand over the permission to Nestle. The current permit holder, Seven Springs, has never drawn more than 260,000 gallons…
Nestlé’s drain on Ginnie Springs By Merrillee Jipson and Jim Tatum, Board Members of Our Santa Fe River What’s wrong with bottled water and Nestlé? What’s right about it?…
…renew an expired water use permit held by a local company, Seven Springs, from which it plans to buy the water at undisclosed cost. Nestlé insists spring water is a…
Nestle bottling plant. Sun photo. The Gainesville Sun’s Cindy Swirko continues to write about the Seven Springs Water Partnership in their bid for pumping millions of gallons of water out…
…sought by Seven Springs Water Partnership, which would enable them to sell water to Nestlé. Some of this response is misinformation. Nestlé’s defense of the extraction rests heavily on its…
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