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PRESS: New Groundwater Regulations to Impact Pre-Existing Coca-Cola, Pepsi Plants  

For Immediate Release
November 16, 2015

New Delhi: The India Resource Center welcomes new guidelines by the government of India which strengthen regulations governing use of groundwater by industries in India.

The new guidelines, brought by the Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) – the national groundwater regulatory agency – become effective today (November 16, 2015) and are significant because they will apply to industries using groundwater regardless of when the industry was established.

This has been a key demand of the India Resource Center as it has campaigned hold beverage companies accountable for excessive and unsustainable groundwater usage across India.

The India Resource Center and allies succeeded in getting Coca-Cola’s plans for expansion of its bottling plant in Mehdiganj, Varanasi rejected in August 2014 because the older CGWA guidelines prohibited bottling operations in areas where the groundwater was declared as over-exploited – but only for new and expansion projects (defined as those after November 15, 2012, the date of the last guidelines).

Campaigns across India challenging unsustainable use of groundwater by industries that were established prior to November 15, 2012 were frustrated by the lack of tangible regulations that could be used to end the blatant abuse of groundwater resources, particularly in severely water stressed areas declared as over-exploited by the government. Of particular note is Coca-Cola’s egregious bottling operation in Kala Dera in Jaipur since 2000 where the groundwater was declared over-exploited in 1998 and Coca-Cola continues to mine groundwater even today despite the devastating consequences.

The latest guidelines could put an end to the excessive and destructive groundwater usage by industries that were “grandfathered in” under the last guidelines.

Under the new guidelines, all industries that use groundwater and do not have approval from the Central Ground Water Authority now have to apply to the CGWA to obtain a No Objection Certificate (NOC) for groundwater withdrawal “with immediate effect”.

The new guidelines also have a separate category for “Water Intensive Industries” which includes more stringent regulations for groundwater usage by industries such as soft drinks, bottled water, breweries, distilleries, paper & pulp, fertilizers and others, and prohibit extraction of groundwater by such industries in over-exploited areas. The stricter regulations for water intensive industries are the result of various community-led campaigns across India against companies such as Coca-Cola and Pepsico which have highlighted the unsustainable mining of groundwater in water stressed areas and sought restrictions.

“The new guidelines are a significant step forward but a lot depends on whether the CGWA will apply the guidelines in letter and spirit for existing industries in water stressed areas, particularly over-exploited areas. It is time for the government to stop water intensive industrial operations in over-exploited areas, as communities across India have been demanding for years. The new guidelines allow for such action immediately”, said Amit Srivastava of the India Resource Center, an international campaigning organization that has raised the issue of strengthening the guidelines on industrial groundwater usage with the CGWA and other agencies repeatedly over the last three years.

The new guidelines do allow for industrial use of groundwater in water stressed areas, and the quantum of groundwater permitted is contingent upon the amount of groundwater recharged by the industry. But the guidelines fail to stipulate measuring and monitoring mechanisms for groundwater recharge, and the guidelines are open to abuse by industries unless a rigid measuring and monitoring system is also articulated and implemented.

The India Resource Center will be working with communities across India who are challenging groundwater use by water intensive industries in over-exploited areas to ensure that the new guidelines are applied by the CGWA when processing applications for the No Objection Certificate. The Center will also work to challenge industrial operations in water stressed areas where the industry is not recharging groundwater, as required by the guidelines.

“Given our experience, we cannot expect that the government will take action on its own, it will have to be pushed. But we now have a much better, legally tenable path available to us, thanks largely to the community driven movements across the country that has moved the CGWA and the Ministry of Water Resources to bring in stronger guidelines applicable to all industries that mine groundwater”, said Srivastava.

Groundwater is a state subject in India, and the CGWA guidelines are applicable only to states that do not have well developed groundwater governance regimes.

For more information, visit www.IndiaResource.org

Contact:
Amit Srivastava +91 98103 46161

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FAIR USE NOTICE. This document contains copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. India Resource Center is making this article available in our efforts to advance the understanding of corporate accountability, human rights, labor rights, social and environmental justice issues. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.





 


 

 

 
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