PepsiCo News
Corporate Accountability International: Pepsi's New Labels Hit Shelves, Raise New Concerns
Corporation urged to report water quality at annual meeting
Last year, these organizations pressured Pepsi to print "Public Water Source" on its Aquafina labels in the interest of disclosure and transparency. Though bottled water marketing depends largely on distinguishing bottled water from the tap, up to 40 percent of bottled water, in fact, comes from the same source.
"Pepsi took an important first step by responding to our Think Outside the Bottle demand that they adequately label the source of their water," said
New Aquafina bottles have just begun hitting shelves, and while their labels spell out "Public Water Source," they also tout the brand's filtration routine.
Despite the marketing to distinguish Aquafina from its source, Pepsi has yet to begin reporting water quality information in the same way as public water systems do. Public tap water is more highly regulated than bottled water, undergoing as many as 90,000 water quality tests in a year.
A shareholders' resolution was introduced calling on Pepsi to recognize the human right to water, including the importance of water quality. The resolution highlights the growing global water crisis, in which one in five people currently lack access to enough clean drinking water.
"Let's face it: water is the next oil, and both resources are running out," said
Organizations supportive of the resolution and Think Outside the Bottle consider recent Pepsi initiatives, such as the CEO Water Mandate, an effort to greenwash the deleterious effect of water bottling on universal access to water.
"Like its main competitor Coca-Cola, PepsiCo is an expert at covering up the environmental impact of its beverage operations", says
Still, organizations are optimistic that Pepsi will in time be more responsive to public opinion of its products and practices than its principal competitors.
"By adopting a human right to water policy, PepsiCo can take a step forward in showing that it respects its customers and the communities in which it operates," said
For more information on Think Outside the Bottle, community struggles, and for facts about bottled water, visit http://www.stopcorporateabuse.org/cms/page1624.cfm .
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SOURCE Corporate Accountability International
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