Global framework focuses on regenerative water use in bottling operations, improved watershed health and enhanced community water resilience
The Coca-Cola Company today announced a holistic strategy to achieve water security for its business, communities and nature everywhere the company operates, sources agricultural ingredients for its beverages and touches people’s lives by 2030.
The strategic framework – which was developed following detailed water risk assessments and shaped by feedback from bottling partners, NGOs, governments and peer companies – focuses on three priorities: reducing shared water challenges around the world; enhancing community water resilience with a focus on women and girls; and improving the health of priority watersheds. Localized, context-based targets, to be announced later this year, will support the global framework.
“These are strong results, but we must do more,” said James Quincey, chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company. “While we remain committed to provide leadership on water through ambitious water stewardship and 100% replenishment, we are shifting our focus toward making a greater impact on people and ecosystems.”
The science-based strategy acknowledges the growing urgency of shared water risks and need for systemic action across the value chain. About one-third of the Coca-Cola system’s bottling plants operate in water-stressed areas, and more than 73% of its global water footprint is used to grow agricultural ingredients like cane sugar, oranges and apples.
- Achieving 100% regenerative water use in bottling operations in water-stressed areas by reducing, reusing, recycling and locally replenishing the water they use;
- Using a five-element watershed health scorecard to address systemic issues around scarcity, quality, ecosystems, infrastructure and governance, with a priority on nature-based solutions;
- Refocusing and broadening replenishment efforts to create systemic impact in priority watersheds;
- Continuing to support access to safe drinking water and sanitation for vulnerable communities and helping communities adapt to the water-related impacts of climate change; and
- Deepening engagement with agricultural suppliers in priority sourcing watersheds to ensure water-sustainable ingredients and landscapes.

“We are prioritizing our efforts based on deep-dive analyses of water risks at our facilities and where we source our ingredients,” said Ulrike Sapiro, Senior Director, Global Water Stewardship and Sustainable Agriculture, The Coca-Cola Company. “These analyses identify ‘leadership locations’ and ‘priority watersheds’ to guide our efforts to the areas where it matters most.”
We spoke with Sapiro for more details on the 2030 framework:
What were the key drivers for this new strategy?
While we’ve made fantastic progress and helped set the corporate benchmark for water stewardship, the risks and shared challenges we face on water resources – for our business, our supply chain and our communities – have outpaced our efforts. With our previous strategy, we set goals and invited others to follow our lead. Many did, and we collectively reshaped what water stewardship means.
Why have water risks and challenges intensified over the last decade or so?
The company’s water stewardship work has, historically, focused on replenishment – returning to communities and nature the amount of water used in beverage production. Will it still be a priority going forward?
It will, indeed, and we will build on what we’ve done. Replenishment is an important metric to measure commitment and scale of action but not a goal in itself. We will maintain the global metric of 100% replenishment globally, but we will make it work harder toward our goal of improving watershed health in water-stressed areas that are critical to the business and our agricultural supply chain. We will assess our priority watersheds systematically against five key criteria and engage local stakeholders to devise integrated and holistic plans for collective action across all of them. Replenishment interventions will play a role or contribute, but it’s not the only solution to address the root causes of risk in many places.
What goals and targets are included in the 2030 strategy?
We have several quantifiable global goals in place. In all leadership locations we currently define, for example, we aim to achieve 100% regenerative water use, i.e. reduce, reuse, recycle and replenish the water they use locally. We also have a goal to drive accelerated water efficiency improvement in water-stressed locations versus 2015, which we will validate through context-based targets with our bottlers. And we aim to implement watershed health plans in 100% of our priority watersheds.
However, water challenges are fundamentally local in nature. We cannot just say, “Across the board, we’re going to do X, Y and Z.” That doesn’t make sense. We have a framework with global goals around operations, watershed health and communities, based on a rigorous risk and vulnerability assessment. That sets the goalposts. The next step is to feed this framework with specific, context-based targets and move swiftly toward action. We are rolling out a process to help markets develop targets grounded in the context of their operating environments and understanding risks and vulnerabilities. Incidentally, this transition process is closely aligned with draft methodology of the Science-Based Targets Network (SBTN) on water.
This strategy leans heavily on our agricultural supply chain. Why?
We conducted our first global water footprint assessment across our value chain – from ingredient to consumer – and found that more than 73% of our global water footprint is used to grow agricultural ingredients like cane sugar, oranges and apples. Water efficiency in agriculture, for example through modern irrigation systems, can be part of the answer, but our goal here as well is to not only manage our impacts but to contribute to overall watershed health. What we’re doing is to look at our agriculture ingredients with the highest water-use intensity – that use the most water for any ton of produce and are grown in water-stressed areas – to identify priority sourcing watersheds. We will engage with our suppliers and the farmers to understand current practices, and identify issues and potential solutions and opportunities for collective action with other buyers and supply chain partners. Irrigation efficiency could be one answer, but a lot of answers lie in conservation agriculture, or soil management, or ecosystem improvement, or looking at the overall watershed outside our direct supply chain.


