Toronto Star

EVIAN FLOWS NEUTRAL

Major spring water brand to set precedent with carbon-neutral factory,

- CORINNE GRETLER BLOOMBERG

ZURICH— Evian aims to become the first major spring water brand to go carbon neutral amid criticism that packaging water from the French Alps and transporti­ng it around the world in plastic bottles causes unnecessar­y environmen­tal damage.

Danone, the brand’s owner, is spending € 280 million ($408 million) on the project, according to chief executive officer Emmanuel Faber, who reinaugura­ted the Evian factory Tuesday.

The site itself is now carbon neutral and is fully powered by renewable sources. Danone aims to offset the pollution caused by transporti­ng Evian water by 2020 as it expands rail transport and promotes biogas.

“I’m aware, and more and more consumers are aware, that transporti­ng water is not ideally what you’d like to do,” Faber said in a telephone interview. “If you want to build a model that’s sustainabl­e, you need to deal with this reality.”

Danone plans to start advertisin­g the carbon-neutral efforts on Evian bottles in the U.S. next year, according to the brand’s head, Véronique Penchienat­i. A few smaller producers, such as Icelandic Glacial and Norway’s Isklar, have claimed the distinctio­n years ago, though they’re tiny compared with Evian, which sold 1.8 billion bottles last year.

While so-called sustainabl­e products are increasing­ly popular, Consumers Internatio­nal, a federation of consumer groups, has criticized the water industry’s initiative­s, saying they do nothing to provide safe and affordable water to millions of people in developing countries that lack it. Environmen­tal groups say bottling spring water wastes precious resources and creates disincenti­ves for government­s to improve tap water.

Faber countered that Evian doesn’t do any harm because it’s taking water that flows naturally from the mountains near Lake Geneva, rather than

“Often it is environmen­tally absurd to sell bottled water when tap water is cheaper, better and far less energy-intensive.” MATHIS WACKERNAGE­L CEO OF GLOBAL FOOTPRINT NETWORK

undergroun­d aquifers.

“When it comes to Evian and the water, I don’t think there’s anything to redeem,” he said.

Danone has annual sales of € 4.6 billion from bottled water, a fifth of its total. Evian is its biggest brand in the product category and its revenue is increasing by a mid- to high-singledigi­t percentage each year, Faber said. The Evian site has reduced the amount of energy needed to produce one litre of water by 23 per cent over the past eight years.

The move toward carbon-neutral certificat­ion in bottled water follows industry shifts in other products such as chocolate, where NestléSA, Cadbury and Mars raced each other to switch to sustainabl­y sourced cocoa and damp concerns of child labour in their products.

Danone’s move will put pressure on other water brands to follow suit, according to Mathis Wackernage­l, CEO of Global Footprint Network, an Oakland, Calif.-based think tank. Still, he questioned whether companies should be emitting carbon to package and ship the product in the first place.

“Often it is environmen­tally absurd to sell bottled water when tap water is cheaper, better and far less energyinte­nsive,” Wackernage­l said.

To offset transport, one of the biggest issues for the bottled-water business, Danone is switching from roads to rails, operating its own private terminal with trains departing every four hours. Some 60 per cent of Evian’s production is shipped by train, with Danone seeking to increase that to 80 per cent because it reduces carbon emissions by 75 per cent, according to Faber.

The yogurt maker also aims to offset carbon emissions by working with farmers in the region of Evian to collect waste for biogas energy. Evian’s biggest markets by sales are France, the U.K. and the U.S. To get to its farthest markets, it ships by sea, which Faber said pollutes less than by land.

 ?? JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Danone CEO Emmanuel Faber reinaugura­ted Evian’s newly carbon-neutral bottling plant in France on Tuesday.
JEAN-PIERRE CLATOT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Danone CEO Emmanuel Faber reinaugura­ted Evian’s newly carbon-neutral bottling plant in France on Tuesday.

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