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Monday 23 December 2024
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Nestlé and Aws join efforts to accelerate responsible water use in the Mena region

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VEVEY, Switzerland – Nestlé and the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) have called on companies in the Middle East and North Africa to adopt the AWS Standard in order to accelerate responsible water use, positively impact local communities, and ensure watershed sustainability by joining forces to address water challenges. Nestlé has already AWS-certified 28 of its water factories around the world, including three in the region and has committed to certifying all of its water factories globally by 2025. Nestlé Waters has also committed to replenishing 100% of the water it uses by the same year.

The call was launched at a virtual Water Stewardship Leaders’ Forum held under Nestlé’s Caring for Water initiative and organized in collaboration with the Emirates Environmental Group, which brought together more than 100 participants from the private and public sectors, academia, and Non-Government Organizations; and featured a diverse and distinguished lineup of speakers from various international organizations.

“As the first company in the Middle East and North Africa to achieve AWS certification at three of our bottling sites, we are proud to be water stewardship pioneers in the region,” said Carlo Galli, Water Resources Director, Nestlé. “The AWS Standard guides us in our engagement with other water users outside our factories to understand shared challenges and identify collective solutions, which is why we are committed to certifying all of our 17 water factories in the Middle East and North Africa by 2025, with our factories in the United Arab Emirates and Algeria slated for certification by 2021.”

The Forum also introduced the Water Stewardship Core Group, a platform for collaboration among stakeholders in the region. Established by the Swiss Agency for Development & Cooperation, the Group aims to build stronger understanding of local and regional water challenges and develop meaningful collective actions to address them.

“Water is a precious and shared resource,” said Adrian Sym, Alliance for Water Stewardship Chief Executive Officer. “Good water stewardship needs leadership that recognizes the importance of transparent, inclusive processes in delivering better outcomes that benefit all who depend on our water resources.”

By adopting the AWS standard, Nestlé has been able to advance water-saving measures, track stewardship efforts, and better coordinate with other stakeholders in order to help promote watershed sustainability.

Caring for Water at Nestlé is done across four key areas: in factories where the company continuously improves water use efficiency, in watersheds where it works with partners to protect shared water resources, across its agricultural supply chains where it helps stakeholders improve water management practices, and in communities where it operates to provide access to clean water and sanitation.

Examples from the region include achieving 42% reduction in water withdrawal per ton of product manufactured across the company’s food factories since 2010; leading the drive for multisectoral partnership to help Lebanon’s Shouf Biosphere Reserve successfully enhance the recharge of groundwater reservoirs; a project to irrigate organic agriculture with excess water in Jordan; supporting a village’s vision to be ‘hepatitis C free’ through health programs benefiting more than 3,000 people in Egypt; and constructing a water fountain near its water factory in Algeria to provide access to clean water.

Overall, Nestlé has collaborated with local authorities to provide access to water hygiene and sanitation services to more than 30,000 people in the Middle East and North Africa.

Read more about how Nestlé cares for water.

Read more about The Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS).

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