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News of coca-cola to invest us$4 billion in china
accc ruling over p&n acquisition puts competition first
soda companies pushed pop as beneficial beverage for infants
coca-cola’s water footprint
margin pressures to drive beverage sector convergence
the coca-cola company “outperforms industry” in q2
coke zero incident results in stricter checks
coca-cola is recovering better than pepsico in beverages, says analyst
customer management & mobility for consumer products
packaging and drinks industry dismiss calls to ban bisphenol a
drinks companies target coffee bar set
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  packaging and drinks industry dismiss calls to ban bisphenol a  

minute levels of bisphenol a detected in drink cans pose no health risk to consumers, said beverage companies and a leading industry body as they rejected calls from an environmental group to ban the chemical. the metal packaging manufacturers association (mpma) said the report by bund, the german arm of friends of the earth, actually underlined the safety of the packaging as consumers would have to drink thousands of cans every day to exceed the established tolerable daily intake (tdi) level for bpa. drinks giants such as coca-cola and red bull also stressed that their containers and beverages were safe. the industry response came after bund released the results of tests showing bpa was found in both the epoxy linings of cans, as well some drinks, made by the likes of coca-cola, red bull and nestle. after analysing 11 drinks, bpa levels per tin ranged from 0.3 micrograms (µg) to 8.3µg. traces of the substance were found in five drinks up to a level of 3.9µg per litre, said the group. bund acknowledged the levels were not harmful in themselves but nevertheless called for a ban on the chemical as consumption of canned drinks would add to consumers’ cumulative exposure to bpa. an absurdity but the packaging and drinks industry has strongly refuted both bund’s findings and their conclusions. “the report of bund on their analysis of bpa in canned beverage products, serves only to confirm the safety of epoxy based linings for beverage cans on the basis of the very low migration figures obtained – orders of magnitude below levels considered safe by health authorities around the world”, mpma technical manager david smith told foodproductiondaily.com. he added that taking the tdi of 0.05 mg/kg bodyweight/day set by the european food safety authority (efsa) in 2007, and the highest migration figure of 3.9µg, a consumer of 60kg bodyweight would need to consume more than 1500 x 50cl cans or 2300 x 33cl cans per day for life of that product to reach the tdi. “this is clearly an absurdity,” said smith. a spokesman for coca-cola said the levels detected in its sprite drink were "many thousands of times below the tdi set by efsa" and that a person would have to drink 30,000 cans a day of the drink at 3.0µg to reach this threshold. red bull challenged the results, claiming the laboratory used by the group was “not accredited for this type of analysis.” the company said it had first commissioned analyses from an “internationally renowned and accredited laboratory” on bpa levels a few years ago and continued to receive regular updates. “the results at hand confirm that bpa from the containers used by us cannot be detected in the simulants which have to be investigated in accordance with applicable food regulations,” said a red bull spokeswoman. the industry players and packaging association all stressed that bpa has been approved for use in food contact materials by a raft of global food regulatory bodies including those in europe, the united states, japan and australasia. the mpma said the sector had given every support to regulatory bodies and that safety of their products was a prime concern. smith said: “in view of the proven insignificance of migration from metal packaging as shown in the bund report, it would be irresponsible for any type of ban to be implemented or supported, as is creating wholly unnecessary consumer concerns.”


    Source :foodanddrinkeurope.com     Date : 3  March   2010    Category : Impression And Package Service


accc ruling over p&n acquisition puts competition first

the australian competition and consumer commission (accc) has announced it will not oppose the proposed acquisition of p&n beverages australia by japanese brewery group asahi after competition concerns were resolved by asahi. on 9 march 2011, the accc opposed an earlier acquisition proposal, saying it would ‘remove p&n as a vigorous and effective competitor in the markets for the supply of carbonated soft drinks (csds) and cordial’. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 15 August 2011   Category : Rest
soda companies pushed pop as beneficial beverage for infants

for over a hundred years, soda companies been selling products with ingredients that we now know are linked to diabetes, obesity, gout and kidney stones. those are some of the effects of the high fructose corn syrup and phosphoric acid found in conventional sodas, and we haven\'t even mentioned the health problems caused by aspartame.and yet, despite the fact that these soda products are demonstrably harmful to human health, the soda industry has been working hard for many decades to convince parents to feed their infants and children more soda. more

 Source : NaturalNews.com   Date : 26 November 2010   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
coca-cola’s water footprint

the coca-cola company and the nature conservancy announced today the release of a water footprint report in conjunction with world water week in stockholm, sweden. the report, entitled “product water footprint assessments: practical application in corporate water stewardship,” examines three pilot studies that were conducted on coca-cola products and ingredients.a product water footprint is the total volume of freshwater consumed, directly and indirectly, to produce a product. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 10 September 2010   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
margin pressures to drive beverage sector convergence

beverage companies will need to move beyond their traditional categories in terms of future mergers with increasingly health focused consumers and an unprecedented level of retail pricing pressure creating serious challenges for the sector, says a rabobank report. acquiring competitors within their core segment is becoming increasingly complicated for leading beverage manufacturers due to the tighter competition regulation and existing level of consolidation within the industry. more

 Source : foodanddrinkeurope.com   Date : 3 June 2010   Category : Beverages
the coca-cola company “outperforms industry” in q2

the coca-cola company has seen volume growth rise by a robust 4 per cent in the second quarter as beverage demand remained strong. the result was led by the key emerging markets of india and china, where volume growth came in at 33 per cent and 14 per cent, respectively. still beverages - which include juices, sports drinks, teas and water brands - outperformed sparkling beverages internationally, while the flagship coca-cola brand saw volumes climb by 3 per cent. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 22 July 2009   Category : Food Companies
coke zero incident results in stricter checks

taiwan has said it would intensify checks on imported products into the country after a batch of concentrate for a coca-cola product was found to contain a preservative banned in the country. two weeks ago, a batch of concentrate for coke zero, which was being exported from china to taiwan, was banned in taiwan for containing methyl para-hydroxybenzoate. consumption of methyl para-hydroxybenzoate, an antiseptic chemical, is said to lead to stomach upsets and raise female hormone levels. more

 Source : foodqualitynews.com   Date : 29 July 2011   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
coca-cola is recovering better than pepsico in beverages, says analyst

pepsico has beaten analyst expectations for first quarter profits but morning star analyst philip gorham believes that in beverages coca-cola is recovering better from the recession. quarterly net income at pepsico stood at $1.14bn - slightly above analyst estimates but down from the $1.43bn reported last year because of interest expenses linked to its bottler acquisitions. the maker of gatorade and tropicana said like-for-like beverage volumes rose 3. more

 Source : foodanddrinkeurope.com   Date : 29 April 2011   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
customer management & mobility for consumer products

cas, the leading provider of customer management and mobility solutions to the consumer products industry, has launched the latest version of their customer management and mobility solution. cas 8 has been designed with input from many of the company’s clients, who include campbells, the coca cola company, nestle and abinbev. cas australia, based in north strathfield, sydney, are also working with many leading local consumer product companies including arnotts, lion nathan, blackmores, pernod ricard and coca cola amatil. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 8 July 2010   Category : food industries Economic
drinks companies target coffee bar set

everyone wants to be involved in a \"hot\" consumer trend - like the cold coffee that is due to appear in supermarkets across the us, reports reuters. pre-packaged coffee drinks from pioneer starbucks\' started migrating to store shelves in 1996. despite an uneven track record, food and beverage companies are now rushing to appeal to the tastebuds and life styles of the twenty-something coffee bar set with pop-the-top, sweetened, iced cappuccino-like drinks. more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 19 April 2002   Category : Beverages
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