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Montreal

Coke, Pepsi plan to fight Montreal on a possible plastic water bottle ban

The Canadian Beverage Association, which represents more than 60 brands, has signed up for Quebec's registry of lobbyists, Radio-Canada has learned.

'The reality of plastic in our environment is a problem,' Mayor Denis Coderre says

The Canadian Beverage Association, which represents more than 60 brands, signed on to Quebec's register of lobbyists in early March.

Coke, Pepsi and Nestl are among the corporations ready to take on a possible ban ofplastic water bottles in Montreal.

Mayor Denis Coderre hinted last month that the city will target banning plastic bottles following its move to ban plastic bags by 2018.

The Canadian Beverage Association, which represents more than 60 brands including Pepsi, Cokeand Nestl, signed on to Quebec's registry of lobbyists in early March, Radio-Canada has learned.

Coderreresponded today, tellingreporters thatMontrealers were having a healthy debate over the role of plastic products.

"We spoke about plastic bags and now we're onto plastic bottles," Coderre said. "The reality of plastic in our environment is a problem."

In a document submtted to the lobby registryon March 8, the association wrotethat bottles are safe and convenient for consumers, and that banning them would restrict their right to choose.

"We want the City of Montreal to reject the proposal to ban water bottles on its territory," the association wrote, addingthe bottles are 100 per cent recyclable across Quebec.

'It was a surprise for us'

Coderre has yet to announce a timeline or concrete measures for a plastic bottle ban, but said in February it is the next step.

The idea caught the association off guard, but it has asked for a meeting with the city.

"It was a surprise for us," association spokesperson Martin-Pierre Pelletier said. "We want to understand the details."

The Association des embouteilleurs d'eau du Qubec (AEEQ), which represents water-bottlerEska,has also called on the city to consult corporations before making a final decision.

Coderre said he was taking an inclusive approach to the issue.

"I'm not dogmatic, I'm very pragmatic in the approach," Coderre said. "It's a cultural shift."

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Thomas Gerbet