Our Source: New Zealand
The 7.365 aquifer is nestled in the Heretaunga Plains, a 300 square kilometre plain found in Hawke’s bay located in the North Island of New Zealand.
Formed over the last 250,000 years from sediment deposited by the Tutaekuri, Ngaruroro and Tukituki Rivers and from coastal marine deposits, our water source is located directly under layers of permeable gravel beds which form our aquifer.
New Zealand as a country is well known globally as an environment conscious country known for the value it places on maintaining a pure and pristine land.
As an effect of value for the environment, New Zealand’s mountains, lakes, rivers and waterfalls remain relatively unchanged and uninfluenced by many of the world’s environmental threats.
Unlike many other countries New Zealand has remained untouched from large scale industrial waste, acid rain, and pollution.