While 2022 was the driest year since water bottling companies began monitoring, BlueTriton consultants and officials maintained the company’s water taking for bottling purposes is sustainable. BlueTriton, the conglomerate who purchased Nestle Waters Canada’s operations in 2021, held a sparsely-attended in-person meeting Thursday morning at the Puslinch Community Centre going over 2022 annual monitoring reports for its wells in Aberfoyle and Erin where it has permits to take water for bottling purposes.
Half a billion litres of water taken by BlueTriton in 2021 has no impact on surface water levels, company says
BlueTriton officials stressed there is no plan to increase water taking for bottling and their operations in Wellington County are not impacting surface water levels. The conglomerate, which bought Nestle Waters Canada in 2021, held an annual engagement meeting earlier this week on technical data gathered from Jan. 1 to Nov. 15 last year. The former company also held these meetings with stakeholders from local municipalities and water organizations.
Water walk makes final stop in Wellington County
Shane Philips, a local water activist and singer/songwriter, concluded the first stage of his “Ear to the Groundwater” tour on June 11 at BlueTriton Brands’ Hillsburgh well. Throughout the week of June 7 to 11, Philips walked to all three wells in Wellington County owned by of BlueTriton (formerly Nestle Waters Canada). “We still can’t see each other for the water in our blood,” Philips said. “I’m walking for the simple issue of dignity – human dignity to have clean water.”