 |

The Perrier
Group announced in 2000 that it planned to build a $60 million bottling
plant in either Osceola County or Mecosta County in central Michigan.
The size of the proposed operation dwarfs that of other bottling
plants in Michigan. So does the size of the Perrier Groups
market share. As the leading water bottler in the nation, the Perrier
Groups market share is twice that of its nearest competitor
(Danone). The companys growth represents 34 percent of the
industrys expansion in the United States from 1992 to 2000.
The companys
hopeful business plan soon came under intense scrutiny, however,
from citizens concerned about the broader effects of such a high-capacity
well. Still more questioned whether the company was actually preparing
to profit from a highly public resource without authorization to
sell it out of its natural basin.
Some residents
and business leaders, on the other hand, embraced the companys
plan as a way to diversify the local economy with a clean, stable
industry. The Perrier Group plans to invest $101 million and create
80 jobs in six years, according to the Michigan Economic Development
Corporation. The company attempted to alleviate concerns by conducting
studies of local aquifers and the effect of its proposed operations.
But residents remain alarmed because of questions the studies left
unanswered and news of residential wells drying up in places like
Big Rock, Texas, where the Perrier Group started bottling water
in the early 1990s.
I.
WHO CAN EXPORT MICHIGANS WATER?
The question of whether the Perrier Group has the right to transfer
Great Lakes water out of a central Michigan watershed for commercial
sale nationwide is already the subject of several legal arguments.
The public interest group, Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation,
filed a lawsuit in early September 2001 that asserts Michigan law
does not allow wholesale off-tract and out-of-basin sale of water.
MCWC also requested earlier in 2001 that the Michigan Attorney General
consider whether the Water Resources Development Act applies to
the Perrier Groups transfer of pure water out of the Great
Lakes Basin.
Federal
Law
The U.S. Water Resources Development Act states that ěno water shall
be diverted or exported from any portion of the Great Lakes within
the United States, from any tributary within the United States of
any of the Great Lakes, for use outside the Great Lakes basin unless
such diversion or export is approved by the governor of each of
the Great Lakes states.
Although the
WRDA does not contain a definition of the word ědiversion,
the Great Lakes Charter ó the treaty between Canada and the United
States that led directly to the Act ó defines ědiversion as
ěa transfer of water from the Great Lakes basin into another watershed,
or from the watershed of one of the Great Lakes into that of another.
It further defines ěGreat Lakes basin water resources as ěthe
Great Lakes and all streams, rivers, lakes, connecting channels,
and other bodies of water, including tributary groundwater, within
the Great Lakes basin.
Michigan Governor
John Engler invoked this understanding of the WRDA last March when
the village of Webster, near Rochester, NY, advertised ěcrystal
clear well water for sale in the New York Times and
the Wall Street Journal. Gov. Engler immediately advised
the village that it risked violating federal law.
ěWebster is
located within the (Great Lakes) basin, Gov. Engler wrote
to then-Mayor Wilbur Bey, ěand even though the water in question
is groundwater, it appears to be hydrologically connected to Lake
Ontario. If this proves to be the case, then the diversion or export
of this water out of the basin will require the approval of each
governor from the eight Great Lakes states.
Both the Water
Resources Development Act and Great Lakes Charter apply to pure
water, a natural and public resource. Food products, such as beverages
and processed foods, are traditionally exempt. Food products, by
definition, have additives (flavors and other ingredients) and are
ětradable goods. They are not essential elements of life,
or ěpublic goods, as pure water is.
The Perrier
Group and the DEQ contend that the companys bottled water
is a tradable food product exempt from the Water Resources Development
Act. Michigan Attorney General Jennifer Granholm, however, offered
on September 13, 2001, a different opinion.
Ms. Granholm
wrote to Gov. Engler: ě(Perriers) proposal would result in
the withdrawal of groundwater from a spring that feeds the Little
Muskegon River, a tributary to Lake Michigan. I know you agree with
me that groundwater hydrologically connected to the Great Lakes
and their tributaries is covered by the WRDA. She concluded
that the Perrier Groups proposal would constitute an out-of-basin
diversion of Great Lakes water within the meaning of the federal
law.
Ms. Granholm
further advised Gov. Engler to work with other Great Lakes governors,
using a consultation process in the WRDA, ěto determine whether
and to what extent this and similar water removal proposals should
be permitted. She warned that Michigan must fully investigate
these water diversion questions and develop an effective and consistent
system for addressing future proposals. Failure to do so may send
a signal that ěcould trigger a massive water grab as users seek
to remove Great Lakes water before such removals can be scrutinized.
Special Report:
More>>
|
 |
 |
| The Perrier
Group sells water under several brand names. |
Under legal
public trust principles, the state is obligated to protect
its water resources for citizens for their rights to enjoy
water for basic needs and for fishing, swimming, and recreation. Under
public trust principles, the Perrier Group must show that its water
diversion proposal satisfies some public interest, not simply its
own business plan.
|