WATER WORLD
Drought forces Coca-Cola to halt canned drinks in Namibia
by Staff Writers
Windhoek (AFP) May 12, 2016


Coca-Cola will stop production of all canned drinks in Namibia and has warned consumers of possible shortages, the company said Thursday, as a regional drought worsens across southern Africa.

Businesses in Windhoek, the Namibian capital, have been ordered by city authorities to cut water consumption by 30 percent -- underlining the impact of a drought that has also gripped Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi.

"We will cease the manufacturing of all canned products locally -- substituting them with imported canned beverages from South Africa," Frik Oosthuizen, head of Coca-Cola in Namibia, said in a statement to AFP.

"This decision has been taken as a direct result of the water crisis that is facing the Central region of Namibia and we are making every effort to continue to supply our customers."

Production of all drinks in glass bottles will also be halted at the Coca-Cola factory in Windhoek, but will continue at its plant in the north of the country.

Plastic bottled drinks will still be produced in Windhoek.

A notice posted by US-based Coca-Cola in Namibian newspapers last week warned customers of possible "sporadic shortages country wide".

"In the short term, prices will not be adjusted," it added. "We are working on alternatives to ensure sustained full supply."

Josua Amukugo, Windhoek municipality spokesman, told AFP that the city "highly appreciates the decision to implement our call to use water wisely."

Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique have all issued drought alerts in recent months with UN World Food Programme (WFP) saying that millions of people have been affected.

.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
WATER WORLD
Extreme rainfall doesn't always mean extreme erosion
Philadelphia PA (SPX) May 11, 2016
In the Puerto Rican rain forest, a strong storm can drop a meter of rain in a single day. All that water rushes into mountain rivers and causes a torrent as the water overflows the riverbanks and charges downstream. It seems intuitive that the force of so much water would lead to massive erosion of a riverbed. But according to a new study by University of Pennsylvania researchers, that int ... read more


WATER WORLD
China, Russia rap US missile defence plan in S. Korea

Army developing new air defense system

Planned US Missile Defense Units in Asia-Pacific Threaten China, Russia

Lockheed Martin tests Aegis on Australian destroyer

WATER WORLD
This is Why Russia's S-500 Air Defense System Makes Pentagon Nervous

New U.S. Navy testing of Norwegian missile

France approved for additional Hellfire missiles

Possible Australian missile buy gets State Dept. approval

WATER WORLD
K-MAX optionally piloted helos deployed to Arizona

Bats' flight technique could lead to better drones

AeroVironment Unveils Mantis i45 EO IR Gimbal Payload for Puma AE

Mexico flies Arcturus fixed-wing VTOL UAV

WATER WORLD
Harris providing advanced satcom terminals to Army

Elbit receives European order for tactical radios

Haigh-Farr showcases Antenna Solutions at DATT Summit

U.S. Army orders radios for Mid-East, African countries

WATER WORLD
Two female US Marines assigned to infantry

Navy SEALs grab limelight in years since bin Laden death

Germany orders soldier training systems

GXV-T revs up research into smarter armored ground vehicles

WATER WORLD
Nordic countries sign joint procurement agreement

Black cadets cause West Point stir with raised fists

Australia gets Singapore defence investment boost

Nigeria says lost $15 bn in military procurement fraud

WATER WORLD
Queen calls Chinese delegation 'very rude'

NATO aims to 'destabilise' Caucasus with Georgia drills: Moscow

Nicaragua's list of ambitious projects

China to join US-led naval exercise: US official

WATER WORLD
Little ANTs: Researchers build the world's tiniest engine

New movies from the microcosmos

Ultra-long, one-dimensional carbon chains are synthesised for the first time

Rice introduces Teslaphoresis to help assemble Nanotubes