Nestlé Pure Life

Nestlé Pure Life is a brand of bottled water created by Nestlé.

Nestlé Pure Life
OwnerNestlé Waters
CountrySwitzerland
Introduced1993 (1993) (as Aberfoyle Springs)
Tagline"A healthy, active lifestyle starts with staying well hydrated with Nestlé Pure Life Purified Water."
Websitehttp://www.nestle-purelife.com/

About

The brand has been sold as Nestlé Pure Life since 2002. Prior to that it was known as Aberfoyle Springs and had been produced by the Aberfoyle Springs company since 1993. Nestlé Pure Life water is sold in 28 countries spread over every continent excluding Australia and Antarctica.[1]

After purchasing the Aberfoyle Springs brand and facilities in 2000, Nestlé changed the name first, in 2002, to "Nestlé Pure Life Aberfoyle," and then to "Nestlé Pure Life Natural Spring Water". Nestlé also bottles the Montclair brand in its facilities. Nestlé's Aberfoyle Springs plant currently bottles two different waters: the on-site Aberfoyle spring water, and spring water tankered in from Cedar Valley Spring in Erin, Ontario. In addition, spring water is botted on-site in Hope, British Columbia.

Nestlé Waters is mostly Canada's largest water bottling company, by volume, with 2 bottling facilities. The larger of the two bottling facilities are located in Aberfoyle, Ontario with the second facility located in Hope, British Columbia and warehouses located in Chilliwack, British Columbia, Hamilton, Ontario and Laval, Quebec.

Criticism

Nestlé was criticized that the water will be bottled in poor regions like south America, which could drain natural water sources and affect people who can't afford the expensive bottled water. The movie Bottled Life documented 2012 the situation and won several film awards.[2]

See also

References

  1. "Country Selector", Nestle Pure Life, 2018-07-01
  2. "The Story - BOTTLED LIFE – The Truth about Nestlé's Business with Water (Documentary)". www.bottledlifefilm.com. Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.