Note: BCWRA has no record of any Artesians or spring water in the area of Hope or the Coquihalla Valley.
Nestle Water's Bottling Plant is almost on top of their deep well to Free Water |
Kinder-Morgan Compressor Station is to the right with water wells towards the Coquihalla River |
Kinder-Morgan Chain Link Fence keeps oil "inside" compound if there's a leak |
Note Curbing around drain beyond the Chain Link Fence |
Earlier this month Kinder-Morgan completed a 35 kilometer long Hydrostatic Test of the two-timing fracturing pipeline between Larson Hill and Hope, with the pressure raised 3psi higher than the 780 psi which is used to shunt the dilbits from Edmonton to Burnaby
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CBC - October 22, 2013 Pipeline Safety Incidents - Interactive MapHave there been incidents near you, have the leaks been duly reported lately, like the two leaks.... which haven't been reported.
2009-139No danger to the Public, but what about other Corporations, like Nestle Water which is just one kilometer down hill from the Compressor Station.
12/12/2009
Hope, British Columbia
Company: Westcoast Energy Inc. (as Spectra Energy Transmission)
Facility: Compressor Station 8B
Raw Summary
On Saturday, 12 December 2009, for 5 hours starting at 12:38 MST, the 8B-L1, 30 and the 8B-L2, 36 sweet natural gas lines downstream of Hope, BC Compressor Station 8B, operated at 783 psi; 3 psi over operating Pressure (780 psi) . The company changed the set points and reduced the Pressure to operating limits. Spectra is investigating why the lines operated for 5 hours over Pressure before being corrected. There were no injuries and no danger to the public.
Downhill to Kawkawa Lake.
Downhill to Hope.
Downhill to the Mighty Fraser.
Downhill to the Salmon.
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Nestle
Wikipedia
Controversy and criticism
Chocolate Price fixing
Marketing of formula
Ethiopian Debt
Melamine in Chinese Milk
Greenwashing
Zimbabwe Farms
Palm Oil Use
E. coli
Child Labour
Bottle Life
Horsemeat Scandal
We Feed The World
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3BL Media take on NestleNestle Waters' Hit and MissChristine Arena
Read moreThere is a great deal at stake in the bottled water business. Perhaps Nestlé Waters North America knows this better than anybody. The company presently controls approximately 41 percent of the $11.7 billion US bottled water market. Like every other competitor in the space, it faces shrinking category sales, as well as mounting pressure from groups complaining about the toll that water corporations take on the planet.
Bottled water activists point to plastic waste, energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, the environmental effects of water extraction, water privatization issues and a range of social problems generated by the industry. Could such “road blocks” deter long-term growth for corporate bottled water empires? Nestlé thinks not.
According to a 2009 document entitled “The Future of Bottled Water” authored by Nestlé CEO Kim Jeffery, the company’s broad portfolio of bottled water products, including Poland Spring, Perrier, Arrowhead, Deer Park and Zephyrhills, are well-positioned to recover from the present economic slump. “Bottled water is perfect as it is,” the company says. “[There are] limited opportunities to innovate.”
Just watch what happens After they figure out how to soak (pun intended)big business for their water equally. They'll be trying to put a meter on private wells.
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