Coca-Cola to see less pain from looming WHO decision on aspartame -
analysts
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[July 01, 2023]
By Savyata Mishra
(Reuters) - Coca-Cola will only see a limited impact if the world health
agency classifies the artificial sweetener used in its Diet Coke,
aspartame, as a possible carcinogen, thanks to its scale of production,
analysts said on Friday.
Such a classification of the popular additive in July by the World
Health Organization's cancer research arm could cause consumers, food
companies, retailers and restaurants to decide whether to fight back or
find alternatives.
But for Coca-Cola, whose low-calorie products accounted for a third of
its total volumes sold in 2022, analysts said switching to a natural
sweetener could be easier than many other companies that use aspartame.
"Coca-Cola has one of the best production and distribution systems
globally... who have successfully navigated plenty of hurdles in the
past, like sugar taxes and reformulations associated with that," said
Charlie Higgs, an associate partner at Redburn Ltd, a consumer staples
research firm.
In the past, beverage makers like Coca-Cola and PepsiCo have tweaked
their ingredient composition to comply with evolving policy changes.
The companies had in 2012 altered their manufacturing process of the
caramel coloring in their colas to meet the requirements of a California
ballot initiative aiming to limit people's exposure to toxic chemicals.
Market Analyst Grzegorz Drozdz at
investment firm Conotoxia Ltd said the shift from aspartame could
hit the short-term profitability of Coca-Cola, but does not see a
steep decline in its long-term growth due to its production history.
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A Coca-Cola truck fills up with diesel
fuel at a gas station in Carlsbad, California, March 20, 2012.
REUTERS/ Mike Blake/File Photo
However, PepsiCo could get an edge over its rival as it had moved
away from aspartame to a blend of sucralose and acesulfame potassium
earlier, CFRA Research said.
The company first replaced the additive from some U.S. diet sodas in
2015, but brought it back in some products a year later. It again
removed aspartame in 2020.
(Reporting by Savyata Mishra in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur)
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