It’s difficult to know why Nestle abandoned plans to pump millions of gallons of water annually from spring near the headwaters of Michigan’s White River, though the existence of an active local opposition group probably didn’t hurt.

From the Gazette News Service – Nestle pulls out of Newaygo plan:

MUSKEGON — Nestle Waters North America has halted its controversial plan to pump spring water from a site near the headwaters of the White River, saying the water was unsuitable for its purposes.

Nestle, which bottles water in Michigan under the Ice Mountain label, announced Thursday that it was not moving forward with its investigation of the site in Newaygo County’s Monroe Township because its initial scientific assessments indicate a different mineral composition than spring water currently bottled as Ice Mountain.

Yoo-Hoo. Sorta.

Score one for the little guys, though Nestle is far from finished. The battle for the heart and soul of McCloud’s water is in a lull as the case makes its way to the California Supreme Court.

It would be wonderful to wake up one morning to find out Nestle was withdrawing from the McCloud project, but despite many setbacks in court, they’re fighting tooth and nail to make the McCloud project happen.

And why not — the deal is so one-sided for Nestle that it justifies almost any amount of legal effort.

If upheld, Nestle will get to pump McCloud’s municipal water for 99 years without ever paying more than the “negotiated in secret” $300,000 annual payment.

Worse, Nestle won’t pay its share of the infrastructure costs, which will be considerable given that up to 1100 truck trips will blast through the tiny town every day, and in the event of a drought, Nestle’s pumping operation actually has priority over water for McCloud’s own citizens.

The list goes on.

[tags]nestle, nestle water, mccloud, white river, ice mountain, newaygo[/tags]