After catastrophic floods engulfed Valencia last month, killing more than 200 people, it might seem counterintuitive to think about water shortages. But as the torrents of filthy water swept through towns and villages, people were left without electricity, food supplies – and drinking water. “It was brutal: cars, chunks of machinery, big stones, even dead bodies were swept along in the water. It gushed into the ground floor of buildings, into little shops, bakeries, hairdressers, the English school, bars: all were destroyed. This was climate change for real, climate change in capital letters,” says Josep de la Rubia of Valencia’s Ecologists in Action, describing the scene in the satellite towns south of the Valencian capital.

In the aftermath, hundreds of thousands of people were reliant on emergency tankers of water or donations of bottled water from citizen volunteers. Within a fortnight, the authorities had reconnected the tap water of 90% of the 850,000 people in affected areas, but all were advised to boil it before drinking it or to use bottled water. Across the region, 100 sewage treatment plants were damaged; in some areas, human waste seeped into flood waters, dead animals were swept into rivers and sodden rubbish and debris piled up. Valencia is on the brink of a sanitation crisis.

But while Garriga and other Catalans have been suffering water shortages in recent years, there’s one group of people that appears to be immune, and even profits from them: the multinational companies extracting millions of litres of water from the very same land. This isn’t just a Spanish issue – across the world, from Uruguay to Mexico, Canada to the UK, many have begun to question whether private corporations should be allowed to siphon off a vital public resource, then sell it back to citizens as bottled water.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    -8
    edit-2
    11 hours ago

    Oh, come on!! Bottled water companies are businesses, just as blanket makers, excavator companies, shovel makers… This is clickbait shit.

    BTW, you can’t own water in Spain. You don’t own a water source. You can get a concession on extraction, but water is a public domain. Not the sea, nor beaches, nor rivers, nor river banks. In Spain you can commercialise services, like extraction and bottling. Municipal water is the service that makes water available. They charge for channeling, chlorination, distribution, but not the water.

    The government may be guilty for not making water more readily available, but not water bottlers. They are just another commercial company, unlike other parts of the world, like shit Nestle BUYING water sources.

    Are prepared food companies evil for charging for their product in times of need? Bastards!

    • @StupidBrotherInLaw
      link
      59 hours ago

      You’re not really this stupid, right? This has to be satirical.