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Water For
Life Resolution passed on June 3 2007 at the AGM |
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Article from website of Investigative Journalism
Cholera and the Age of the Water Barons
The explosive growth of three private water utility companies in
the last 10 years raises fears that mankind may be losing control
of its most vital resource to a handful of monopolistic
corporations. In Europe and North America, analysts predict that
within the next 15 years these companies will control 65 percent
to 75 percent of what are now public waterworks. The companies
have worked closely with the World Bank and other international
financial institutions to gain a foothold on every continent. They
aggressively lobby for legislation and trade laws to force cities
to privatize their water and set the agenda for debate on
solutions to the world's increasing water scarcity. The companies
argue they are more efficient and cheaper than public utilities.
Critics say they are predatory capitalists that ultimately plan to
control the world's water resources and drive up prices even as
the gap between rich and poor widens. The fear is that
accountability will vanish, and the world will lose control of its
source of life.
To view the entire page, go to
http://www.publicintegrity.org/water/report.aspx?aid=44 |
Article from website of Investigative Journalism
Hard Water: The Uphill Campaign to Privatize Canada's
Waterworks
Hamilton was the first privatized large water utility in Canada, a
country where waterworks have been overwhelmingly a public affair
– and where most people like it that way. The Hamilton
experience was supposed to demonstrate an alternative, free market
model, supposed to change public opinion. It has. But not as
expected. To view the entire page, go to
http://www.publicintegrity.org/water/report.aspx?aid=58 |
‘Five Things You Should Know About Water’ by The Council of
Canadians.
www.kairoscanada.org/e/ecology/water/5things.asp |
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St.
Catherines City Council resolution concerning bottled water |
Ten Concerns about Bottled Water
Excerpted from Inside the Bottle – an Expose of the Bottled Water
Industry
by Tony Clarke
Polaris Institute Report, 2005
www.kairoscanada.org/e/ecology/water/10concerns.asp |
Privatisation of Water in India
Thirst for profit
People pay more for water than corporates do; in many parts of the
country soft-drink giants get it almost free. Whole communities
lose out as heavyweights like Coke step in. The corporate hijack
of water is on and if the current trend continues, India's water
sources will be in private hands before long, writes P Sainath.
http://www.indiatogether.org/2006/may/psa-thirst.htm |