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The fate of one of Florida’s most fragile freshwater springs now is in the hands of the Nestlé company, which intends to drain nearly 1 million gallons a day and sell them back to us in plastic ...
The Water Is Already Low At A Florida Freshwater Spring, But Nestlé Wants More Nestlé wants to increase the amount of water it withdraws from Ginnie Springs to nearly 1.2 million gallons a day ...
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Nestle Waters North America will be able to ramp up bottling to nearly 1 million gallons of water a day from the Ginnie Springs area after a permit was approved Tuesday over ...
A North Florida water district will decide whether Nestle, which already bottles millions of gallons of water from Florida springs, will be able to increase pumping at Jennie Springs.
Nestle already bottles water at several other springs in Florida as do other companies. “The amount of flow that we are talking about here,” he said, “comes out to be about a quarter of a ...
Opposition is growing in Florida to a water bottling company that wants to take more than a million gallons of water a day from Ginnie Springs. Environmentalists want limits on the amount taken.
We talked about water in Florida and who has the right to use it and for what purposes. Nestle is thought to be interested in a water bottling plant near High Springs, Florida, under the water permit ...
A Florida state water board on Tuesday unanimously approved “with protest” pumping about 1 million gallons daily from Ginnie Springs for Nestle's water business. Skip Navigation Share on Facebook ...
Their “Say NO to Nestle Water Grab Protest” is Friday in High Springs (northwest of Gainesville) beginning at 5:30 p.m. Friday is also the day the region’s water management district should receive ...
Nestle wants to extract 1.1 million gallons per day from Ginnie Springs in Florida. Environmentalists want to protect the springs and its resident turtles.
In Florida, Nestlé is taking heat from environmental groups and others concerned about the future of one of the state's most endangered natural resources — its freshwater springs.
Opposition is growing in Florida to a water bottling company that wants to take more than a million gallons of water a day from Ginnie Springs. Environmentalists want limits on the amount taken.
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