The Coca-Cola Company

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Coca-Cola, USAID and BraMali Launch Wastewater Treatment Plant in Mali

February 4, 2008

At a groundbreaking ceremony in Bamako in the West African nation of Mali on Jan. 28, C.E.O. of The Coca-Cola Company, Neville Isdell, joined representatives from business, government and civil society to lay the cornerstone of a new wastewater treatment plant.

The treatment plant, which will be completed summer 2008, will ensure the bottling facility meets the Company's wastewater treatment standards. Process wastewater is typically the single largest, local environmental impact the production facilities (concentrate to bottling/canning plants) have in terms of volume and ecological effects in the vicinity of the plant.

In 1992, The Coca-Cola Company issued requirements for processing wastewater. Global operations are given the choice of discharging to municipal systems that fully treat wastewater or building a treatment plant on site. Both options treat the water to levels protective of aquatic life prior to discharge into the environment.

Through a partnership with USAID, The Coca-Cola Company, BGI (a global bottling partner) and the "Water and Development Alliance" (WADA), the treated water from the wastewater treatment system is intended to help support sustainable agriculture for the community that surrounds the plant.

The wastewater treatment plant project is part of a larger effort between the Company, WADA, USAID and local communities and NGOs to help bring safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene education to communities throughout Mali.