Dirty money: thatโs what Greenpeace is calling the $26 billion in revenue brought in by dairy giant Fonterra over the last financial year.
Greenpeace spokesperson Sinรฉad Deighton-OโFlynn says, โWhile many New Zealanders are unable to drink the water from their taps, and still more are struggling to pay for butter at the supermarket, Fonterra is profiting at the expense of our health, Aotearoaโs rivers and lakes, and the climate.
โEverybody should be able to safely drink the water coming out of their kitchen tap, or take a dip in the local river without getting sick. But the dirty dairy industry, led by Fonterra, is contaminating lakes, rivers and drinking water with unsafe levels of nitrate and E. coli.
โWhen we look at the state of drinking water, rivers and lakes, it is clear that the only thing trickling down in this economy is nitrate and E. coli.โ
โIn Canterbury, this has led to a declaration of a nitrate emergency, because of the sheer volume of groundwater supplies that are unfit for drinking.โ
In September, 44% of wells tested in a Canterbury study were above the Governmentโs legal limit for nitrate in drinking water. A growing body of research also highlights health risks associated with consuming nitrate-contaminated drinking water at much lower levels than the current legal limit.
โFonterra is milking New Zealand dry. While a handful of executives are lining their pockets, the rivers and lakes are being choked with toxic algae, and people are getting sick from drinking the water from their taps.โ says Deighton-OโFlynn.
Greenpeace is calling for an end to dairy expansion because of the environmental harm caused by the industry.
โWeโre in the middle of a climate and biodiversity crisis,โ says Deighton-OโFlynn. โFonterra is raking in billions while polluting New Zealandโs lakes and rivers, and intensive dairy is cooking the climate.โ


