http://www.democracynow.org/2008/9/12/flow_for_love_of_waternew_filmFLOW:
For Love of Water…New Film Examines Global Water Crisis

*FLOW: For Love of Water* is a new documentary premiering in New York and
Los Angeles today that takes on the global water crisis. We speak with
filmmaker Irena Salina and water rights activist, Maude Barlow, head of the
Council of Canadians, founder of the Blue Planet Project and author of
several books, including *Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the
Coming Battle for the Right to Water*. [includes rush transcript]

*Maude Barlow*, head of the Council of Canadians, Canada's largest public
advocacy organization, and founder of the Blue Planet Project. She is the
author of sixteen books, including *Blue Gold*. Her latest is *Blue
Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to
Water*. She is a recipient of Sweden's Right Livelihood Award, known as the
"Alternative Nobel."

*Irena Salina*, award-winning filmmaker. She is the director of *FLOW*.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *The Democratic and Republican conventions were a two-week
advertisement for soft drink giants Pepsi and Coca-Cola. At the Democratic
convention in Denver, Coke signed on as one of the sponsors of the delegate
gift bags, its logo emblazoned in large red letters on the side. Those bags
were being hauled around by delegates as they convened in—that's right, the
Pepsi Center. Meanwhile, Coca-Cola was named the official recycler for both
the Democratic and Republican conventions. Its logo was emblazoned on both
sides of the gift bags at that convention.

*AMY GOODMAN: *While both companies are globally recognized for their soft
drinks, many people don't realize Coke and Pepsi are also making a fortune
in bottled water. Coca-Cola has its Dasani brand; Pepsi, Aquafina. Last
year, Pepsi was forced to make an embarrassing admission, that Aquafina is
nothing more than tap water.

Well, the admission came amidst a national campaign to raise awareness about
the economic and environmental costs of the billion-dollar bottled water
industry. A new documentary premiering tonight in New York examines the
global water crisis and takes on the issue of bottled water. It's called *FLOW:
For Love of Water*. This is an excerpt.

   *ERIK D. OLSON: *Bottled water is used by millions of people around the
   world, because they think it's safer than tap water. There is less than one
   person, according to the Food and Drug Administration, regulating the entire
   multibillion-dollar bottled water industry in the United States. That means
   that that poor person does multiple things, and one of them is water. The
   Food and Drug Administration, if you ask them what's in any brand of bottled
   water, they'll say, "We have no idea."

   *PENN GILLETTE: *It's so stupid. Why would people pay such a premium for
   bottled water? To find out, we took over a very trendy California
   restaurant. We printed our own elegant water menus with phony imported
   waters costing as much as $7 per bottle. Our water steward gives our first
   lucky couple our special water list.

   *CUSTOMER 1: *I guess we'll get the *l'eau du robinet*.

   *WATER STEWARD: *The *l'eau du robinet*?

   *CUSTOMER 1: *Yeah.

   *WATER STEWARD: *Oh, fantastic!

   *PENN GILLETTE: *It's French for "tap water."

   *CUSTOMER 1: *Cheers! Yeah, it tastes clean.

   *CUSTOMER 2: *It has a flavor to it.

   *WATER STEWARD: *How would you compare it to tap water?

   *CUSTOMER 2: *Oh, yeah, definitely better than tap water.

   *PENN GILLETTE: *What was the actual source of these chic waters? A
   garden hose on the restaurant patio.

   *LEE JORDAN: *Three-out-of-four Americans drink bottled water, and
   one-in-five will only drink bottled water. And water is something we already
   pay for.

   *UNIDENTIFIED: *Leading brands are basically tap water, often sold for
   more than the cost of gasoline.


*AMY GOODMAN: **FLOW: For Love of Water*, an excerpt of the new documentary
premiering tonight both here in New York, as well as in Los Angeles.

Irena Salina is the director of *FLOW*. She joins us in our firehouse
studio, along with Maude Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians, founder
of the Blue Planet Project, author of sixteen books, including *Blue Gold*.
Her latest is called *Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming
Battle for the Right to Water*.

We welcome you both to *Democracy Now!* Before we deal specifically with the
movie, Maude Barlow, this issue of the conventions, talking about what is
and what is not talked about. The Democratic and Republican conventions,
brought to you by Pepsi and Coke. Pepsi Center is where the coronation for
the Democrats took place, and Coca-Cola was everywhere on those delegate
bags.

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Yeah, and at the recent Olympics, you know, as well, in
China. Coca-Cola was one of the official sponsors, and you couldn't bring
water, even your own bottled water, in. You had to only—you could only get
Coca-Cola water. I would love to know how many bottles of Coke water were
thrown away and to add to the pollution in China.

You know, this is part of what I call the movement towards creating a global
cartel of water, kind of like we have a global cartel of energy, where, you
know, the day may come—and we're resisting it very hard, so it may not; we
hope it won't, but that every drop of water will be spoken for privately by
a corporation, whether it's bottled water, utilities, you know, the service
of, delivery of your water, recycling, desalination—nanotechnology is the
latest. At every phase, water will be corporately owned, because we are a
planet running out of fresh, clean water, which doesn't sound right, because
we all learned back in grade six that can't happen, but it is happening. And
the demand's going like that, and the supply's going like that, down.

And if we don't understand this really soon, we're going to find that
corporations understand it much better than we do. They're moving in to take
control of water. Coke and Pepsi, by the way, are under a great deal of
criticism and resistance around the world, and so they're trying very hard
to build their name through things like the two conventions, through giving
money to schools and that kind of thing, through building pipes in Africa so
poor people can access water, because, really, their story is one of going
into communities around the world with Nestle, which is the other big
bottled water conglomerate, and just removing people's water rights. So
they're fighting back.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *And what share of the market—because they're mostly
associated in people's minds with beverages.

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Yeah.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *In terms of bottled water, how much do they control?

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Bottled water is where they're both making money now,
because there's a real move by parents in schools against sugar water—you
know, pop—and so, they're saying, OK, well, then the new beverage of choice
is bottled water. And now, of course, they're selling water to kids through
these kids' bottles and the tradable bottles that you can get back and
forth.

Last year, we put something like 50 billion gallons of water in plastic
bottles around the world. Almost all of it, all but about five percent, did
not get recycled around the world. So these companies have a lot to answer
for.

*AMY GOODMAN: *And Senator Obama's major speech at the Invesco Stadium—not
to be confused with the Pepsi Center—as you walked in, there were all these
Coke stations, and they were handing out bottled water.

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Yeah, it's just—you know, it shows how out of touch even
in-touch people like Barack Obama are with an issue that is changing. And if
you go anywhere in North America or Europe now—it's beginning to spread to
other parts of the world—there is an anti-bottled water movement, and it's a
very powerful movement. We're getting restaurants and city councils. In my
country, Canada, we've got a raft of municipalities and school boards
passing, you know, anti- or bottled-water-free zones. And it's because—

*AMY GOODMAN: *Why? Why is bottled water so bad?

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Because it's—first of all, it's the corporate takeover of
water, and it makes people think that what comes out of their tap doesn't
matter. So you're not going to be prepared to keep your taxes going for
infrastructure repair. And that's the most important thing, is clean,
accessible, safe public water.

Secondly, it's polluting. Massive amounts of plastic, massive amounts of
energy used in the creation and transportation of bottled water, CO2
emissions. And it's also quite poisonous. I mean, the plastic itself leaks
chemicals. People say to me, "Well, I got a great deal at Wal-Mart on my
water." "Why do you think you got a great deal? It's been sitting there for
six months. You should not be drinking it."

When you have a different view of bottled water, you actually look at that
and think, I wouldn't put that stuff in my mouth. I would not. And it's
unregulated. And it's less safe than your good, clean, safe tap water, which
is what needs to be the goal here.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *Irena Salina, you were telling us before we went on camera
about New Yorkers, the role that New Yorkers are playing in this crisis.

*IRENA SALINA: *Yeah, I saw recently a quote that said basically that if New
Yorkers were to quit bottle of water for one week, they would save 24
million bottle of plastic in landfills. Just to give you a perspective, I
mean, that's—

*AMY GOODMAN: *Tell us about *For Love of Water*.

*IRENA SALINA: **FLOW*. *FLOW* is a journey. I mean, we started—it started
from an article that I read in *The Nation* in 2001. It basically said, "Who
owns water?" It implied, is water going to be the next oil of the
twenty-first century? And Maude and Tony Clarke had written the article.

And I, shortly after that, started exploring pollution, the have and the
have-not, who owns water around the world, and as well as what I called
transparent pollution, which is things in our water that we absolutely have
no idea about it, just like an herbicide, for example, in the United States
that is spread all over the Corn Belt that is called atrazine, and that has
been banned for approximately ten years all over Europe—not just one little
village in Europe, all over Europe. They have found that it changes—you
know, it's an endocrine disruptor. Some cancers are close to it. And even
though it's been banned in Europe for ten years, they still find traces of
it in the water ten years later.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *Who makes it?

*IRENA SALINA: *Syngenta. Syngenta is a Swiss company. And they're one of
the leaders now in ethanol. So it gives you an idea of—it's not just the
United States, where it's going; it's worldwide.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *And the US is one of the only countries that has not banned
it, or is it also being used in the third world?

*IRENA SALINA: *I think it's being spread in forests in Australia. I read a
big movement against that. In South Africa, it was used, I think, but they
phased out of it.

*AMY GOODMAN: *Maude Barlow, you're just back from Australia?

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Yeah, and I want to tell Americans the story of another
so-called first world country that—because we know about thirst and drought
and dying and death in the Global South, but this is a first world country
running out of water. And I want to tell that story to Americans, because,
as Irena shows so brilliantly in her film, that the notion here that there's
unlimited amounts of water is absolutely false.

And what they've done there is everything wrong. And what I see happening
here is just a repeat—it's about maybe ten years behind—with removal of
water from watersheds, the continued pollution, not putting money into
infrastructure, privatization of water into this—a private right, so that
they—what they call unbundled water from the land. And you can actually sell
the water away from the land, which is exactly the wrong thing to be doing.
And now big pools of international investors are coming along and buying up
water rights, happening here with T. Boone Pickens and others in Texas and
California, where the notion of water as a property, as a private commodity,
is allowing people to buy it, horde it, sell it, even bequeath it. And it's
a mistake. And I want to tell that story here, because I see what happened
there. I see they've hit the water wall. There are going to be refugees from
Australia going to New Zealand and North America and so on.

*AMY GOODMAN: *What does T. Boone Pickens have to do with this?

*MAUDE BARLOW: *He didn't make enough money, I guess, out of energy, so he's
now buying up water rights, and he is going to build a pipeline and is
buying up the property that he will need for this pipeline to transport
water that he's going to sell. And he's holding onto it until it's worth
even more money than it's worth now, so when blue gold may be blue
platinum—I don't what we'd call it next.

*JUAN GONZALEZ: *And he's also advertising heavily now on television for his
supposed wind power projects.

*MAUDE BARLOW: *Wind. Yeah, but it's all connected, because the wind project
is very connected to his water pipeline that he wants to build. And he's
trying to green himself, but you can't green yourself by privatizing water.

*AMY GOODMAN: *What is it, Irena, that's being banned from the water?
Atravine—what?

*IRENA SALINA: *Atrazine.

*AMY GOODMAN: *Atrazine, where?

*IRENA SALINA: *Atrazine, oh, all over Europe, not just one place in Europe,
everywhere.

*AMY GOODMAN: *And what is it?

*IRENA SALINA: *It's an herbicide. It's an herbicide that is spread on corn
field and I think on soy field, too.

*AMY GOODMAN: *Well, I want to thank you both for being with us. Tonight,
the film opens in New York and Los Angeles. It's called *FLOW*, which stands
for "For Love of Water." I want to thank you both for being with us, Maude
Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians. And thank you very much, Irena
Salina, for being there.

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