Icelandic Glacial the premium natural spring water from Iceland has announced its partnership with Remfly HongKong Ltd.. The company will distribute Icelandic Glacial to outlets nationwide throughout Hong Kong and Macau.
We are very happy and convinced that partnering with Remfly in both Hong Kong and Macau will not just strengthen our business ties but also provide a stronger and more effective means to offer our premium water to these extraordinary places,” said Jón Ólafsson, chairman and co-founder of Icelandic Glacial in a statement.
The award winning water is now available in twenty countries around the world, from the United States, Russia and Tawain, to name a few.
The water company is owned by Icelandic businessmen, father and son, Jón Ólafsson and Kristján Ólafsson and American company Anheuser-Busch, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Belgian-Brazilian multinational beverages conglomerate Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Icelandic Glacial is bottled at the source from the more than 5,000 years old Ölfus Spring in South Iceland.
Icelandic Glacial the premium natural spring water from Iceland has announced its partnership with Remfly HongKong Ltd.. The company will distribute Icelandic Glacial to outlets nationwide throughout Hong Kong and Macau.
We are very happy and convinced that partnering with Remfly in both Hong Kong and Macau will not just strengthen our business ties but also provide a stronger and more effective means to offer our premium water to these extraordinary places,” said Jón Ólafsson, chairman and co-founder of Icelandic Glacial in a statement.
The award winning water is now available in twenty countries around the world, from the United States, Russia and Tawain, to name a few.
The water company is owned by Icelandic businessmen, father and son, Jón Ólafsson and Kristján Ólafsson and American company Anheuser-Busch, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Belgian-Brazilian multinational beverages conglomerate Anheuser-Busch InBev.
Icelandic Glacial is bottled at the source from the more than 5,000 years old Ölfus Spring in South Iceland.