Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages (NW&PB) today announces a pioneering achievement in global water stewardship, becoming the first food or beverage company worldwide to secure 100 per cent certification of all its 39 bottling sites1 to the Alliance for Water Stewardship (AWS) Standard. Two sites – Buxton, UK and Tunuyan, Argentina, achieved Platinum certification, the highest level available.
Why this matters
As water stress and extreme weather put growing pressure on rivers, aquifers and communities, effective water stewardship increasingly depends on action beyond a factory fence line. By working with local partners in the watersheds where it operates, Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages is working to help strengthen long-term water resilience for people, nature, and business continuity.
AWS Standard achievement
The AWS Standard – which is the only globally-recognised
Water regeneration at local level
In the mindset of continuous improvement, this
All of the water regeneration projects are implemented in close collaboration with local partners to answer shared water challenges, creating
Investing in the future
The business has invested significantly into two lighthouse markets developing major collective action programmes involving key public and private sector stakeholders:
France: Agrivair Garrigue is a €25 million, five-year initiative that aims to protect vital water resources and enhance biodiversity in the Gard region (home of the Perrier and Maison Perrier brands) through sustainable agricultural practices, habitat restoration, and water-quality improvements across the catchment.
Italy: Building on a five year, €30 million investment in projects to protect water basins, safeguard biodiversity and support local communities at the catchments for the S.Pellegrino,
Sanpellegrino, Acqua Panna and Levissima brands, F.O.N.T.E (Future, Origin, Nature, Territories, Ecosystems) will see a further €40 million invested through to 2030 to strengthen and expand these environmental and social initiatives.
Extending strategic partnerships
Further advancing its strategic focus on water resilience for both quantity and quality, Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages is announcing the extension of its engagement with the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). This follows
Looking forward, Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages will continue to work with AWS and IUCN to ensure ongoing
“We are pleased to share these significant milestones today on AWS certification and water regeneration. Good water stewardship is part of our DNA and strong water resilience is a strategic imperative for our business – that’s why we look to collaborate everywhere we operate to ensure we address any shared water challenges, now and for the future. This is something we’ve been working on for decades.” said Muriel Lienau, CEO of Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages.
“We remain committed to protect, restore and return water where we operate. Water resilience has a growing awareness on the international agenda and we know no one can achieve this on their own. By partnering with experts, local organisations and communities we know that collaboration at catchment level is the key for meaningful impact.”
Adrian Sym, chief executive of the Alliance for Water Stewardship, commented, “In an era of increasing resource volatility, where individuals and organisations are passionate about making a difference but don’t always know how, a global independent standard that includes an accessible, independent and practical framework for water stewardship and landscape protection is essential.
“Nestlé Waters & Premium Beverages’ approach to collaborative, localised, context-based solutions, tailored to each bottling site is exemplary. It’s fantastic to see a large global company approaching this bottom-up all over the world, rather than top-down or by taking a mass rebalance approach to offset water usage. In fact, NW&PB has provided invaluable learnings for driving scaled impact and is an important ally in helping us deliver on our mission to ignite and nurture water stewardship globally.”
James Dalton, global director for Water and Wetlands at IUCN, commented: “Integrated action and decision-making on water, biodiversity and climate is essential for long-term business resilience.




