Coca-Cola in India Must Pay $47 Million in Pollution Compensation

Coca-Cola ordered to pay $47 million in compensation for pollution its plant caused in in southern India.
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Coca-Cola has been ordered to pay $47 million in compensation for pollution its plant caused in the Kerala state in southern India.

A state-initiated panel found that the Palakkad bottling plant was guilty of polluting groundwater and foisting cadmium-laden waste sludge as fertilizer to local farmers.

Coca-Cola has refuted the allegations in a statement on its Web site and says the company is currently talking to the Indian central government to establish a uniform national regulatory framework for India. It claims that the company uses its bio-solids as a fertilizer around the world including the United States.

In August 2005 Kerala State Pollution Control Board (KSPCB) closed the plant down amidst mass protests from poor farmers and environmental activists.

Cindy Drukier
Cindy Drukier
Author
Cindy Drukier is a veteran journalist, editor, and producer. She's the host of NTD's International Reporters Roundtable featured on EpochTV, and perviously host of NTD's The Nation Speaks. She's also an award-winning documentary filmmaker. Her two films are available on EpochTV: "Finding Manny" and "The Unseen Crisis"