BlueTriton, the company that owns Arrowhead brand, has been taking water from San Bernardino springs for more than 100 years

California has ordered the company that owns Arrowhead bottled water to stop using some of the natural springs it has utilized for more than a century, following a years-long campaign by environmentalists to stop the operation.

Regulators on Tuesday voted to significantly reduce how much water BlueTriton – the owner of the Arrowhead brand – can take from public lands in the San Bernardino mountains. The ruling is a victory for community groups who have said for years that the bottled water firm has drained an important creek that serves as a habitat for wildlife and helps protect the area from wildfires.

Arrowhead bottled water traces its roots to a hotel at the base of the San Bernardino Mountains that first opened in 1885 and began selling bottled spring water from its basement in 1906. But environmental and community groups say the company has never had permission to take water from the springs in the San Bernardino national forest.

The state water resources control board agreed that BlueTriton does not have permission to use the water and ordered the company to stop. The order does not ban the company from taking any water from the mountain, but it significantly reduces how much it can take.

  • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s wild to me that public resources like water are given, not sold, to corporations like Nestle- who then go on to lobby for less public spending on water systems, and who mass-produce those shitty bottles that end up everywhere.

    Charge them royalties for taking water from springs, make it cheaper for nestle to buy water from a utility.

  • iltoroargento@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    BlueTriton (depressingly corporate garbage name, btw) is still basically Nestlé.

    Reporting shouldn’t be allowed to further obfuscate the corporate hierarchies involved in fucking up everyone’s lives. If reporters included all the arcane structural and legal bullshit that corporations pull in order to escape even the slightest sliver of responsibility (and spin public perception), the average reader would be much more aware of the corporatocratic hellscape in which we live.

    Edit: added a bit because it’s technically not Nestlé but that’s the whole problem as the technicality is about as far as it goes…

    • ares35@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      there is a genuine need, and it has its place, but that place is not being mass-produced and sold for ridiculous profits at the expense of the environment.

      • lobut@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I mean, it’s a microcosm but I remember a friend in uni refusing to drink tap or Brita water. He’d just keep cases and cases of water by his mini fridge and just plow threw them.

        I got upset with my sister in law because she’ll buy bottled water when I had a water filter in our fridge. Hell, you can boil it if you’re really uncertain. She said there was stuff about chemicals and I said the plastic for the water probably isn’t any better for you.

        • Dudewitbow@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          But taking a shower in chemicals are okay? The mental gymnastics of some people.

          Tap water is also more regulated than bottled water too.

          • WhyIDie@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I’m not defending bottled water, but in regards to the shower argument, there’s a reason things are rated for topical use vs food grade

            the better argument is someone drinking bottled water while using tap water to wash their foods

            • Dudewitbow@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Tap water is regulated by the EPA, and bottled water is regulated by thr FDA (in the states). Both have to make it drinkable. EPA forces types of contaminents, intended use (residential water is designed to be drinkable), and have all water quality reports public after treating said water. EPA however doesnt regulate the pipes, so the flynt michigan sotuation came out due to that.

              Bottled water tests water at source and before product. Bottled water must label the source where the water came from, which includes tap…

              Unless the person drinking only bottled water actively reads the label to know what the source water is, its a very popr argument to avoid tap when the attempt to avoid it is half baked.

              • WhyIDie@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                I think you misunderstood what I said, I’m agreeing with you on the mental gymnastics, but the argument you put out wasn’t exactly the best when given to the PoV of the gymnast; they’re avoiding ingesting tap water in favor of bottled, but they ingest it regardless, unless they wash everything with bottled water like a very crazy person

                and didn’t expect to respond again about this crazy hypothetical person that lives rent free in both our minds, but I’m going to evict that person right now for my own sanity

          • SkyeStarfall
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            1 year ago

            Tricked people into buying water they can get for near free from the tap

            Possibly the biggest grift in history

            • Zink@programming.dev
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              1 year ago

              Think of how many bottles of water you can get for $10. Anything from event prices to Costco prices, doesn’t matter.

              For $10 I get about a thousand gallons of tap water. I have a back yard pond, so I think in terms of bulk quantity cost of tap water, lol. Technically the sewer charge is about another $10 for that same amount of water.

              The water is pretty good, and tastes just about perfect to me once it’s run through the cheap filter in our refrigerator.

              IMO the worst part of bottled water is the plastic, plus the thought of shipping literal water around the country/world.

      • eek2121@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We could use something other than plastic. We should be banning the use of single-use plastics everywhere.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I am sure emergency workers would rather not have to haul around water in glass containers after a disaster. If you have another material that is cheap, can be injected molded, bends instead of breaking, only impacts humans under mass exposure, and lightweight plesse let people know.

          • eek2121@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Aluminum is lighter than glass. Cardboard can be treated so that it holds fluid as well (and can still be made recyclable)

            Regardless, plastic requires fossil fuels to make. It needs to go.

            I have aluminum cups that can be (hand) washed/reused/recycled. Most plastic cannot be recycled

            The tech is there, companies just need to be incentivized to use it.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I don’t know how the chemistry works, but we had aluminum cups and they were somehow taking the calcium in the water and concentrating it into little deposits on the bottom of the cup which were hard to get off. I switched back to glass.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Alright so go and do it. I have done some plastic extruder machine control systems. Let me know when you need my help. It is pretty crazy to me that there is this really simple solution that no one on earth is trying and there is a shitton of money to be made but it is possible.

              • SkyeStarfall
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                1 year ago

                Are you missing the point that plastic is used because it is cheaper, not because it is better for humanity and nature?

                It’s like saying “so go ahead and fix the climate, if fixing the climate is so good for us”. What exactly do you think the problem is?

          • SkyeStarfall
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            1 year ago

            Thermoses are commonly used, and they even have a vacuum inside!

            If you don’t care about keeping the internal temperature, there’s a lot of options for good reusable water containers. Why should we even use disposable containers if we can avoid it?