The drop in soda consumption represents the single
largest change in the American diet in the last decade.
largest change in the American diet in the last decade.
Five years ago, Mayor Michael A. Nutter proposed a tax on soda in Philadelphia, and the industry rose up to beat it back.
Soda lobbyists made campaign contributions
to local politicians and staged rallies, with help from allies like the
Teamsters union and local bottling companies. To burnish its image, the
industry donated $10 million to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
It worked: The soda tax proposal never got out of a City Council committee.
It’s a familiar story. Soda taxes have also flopped in New York State and San Francisco. So far, only superliberal Berkeley, Calif., has succeeded in adopting such a measure over industry objections.
The
obvious lesson from Philadelphia is that the soda industry is winning
the policy battles over the future of its product. But the bigger
picture is that soda companies are losing the war.
Even
as anti-obesity campaigners like Mr. Nutter have failed to pass taxes,
they have accomplished something larger. In the course of the fight,
they have reminded people that soda is not a very healthy product. They
have echoed similar messages coming from public health researchers and
others — and fundamentally changed the way Americans think about soda.
Over
the last 20 years, sales of full-calorie soda in the United States have
plummeted by more than 25 percent. Soda consumption, which rocketed
from the 1960s through 1990s, is now experiencing a serious and
sustained decline.
Sales are stagnating as a growing number of Americans say they are actively trying to avoid the drinks that have been a mainstay of American culture. Sales of bottled water
have shot up, and bottled water is now on track to overtake soda as the
largest beverage category in two years, according to at least one
industry projection.
The
drop in soda consumption represents the single largest change in the
American diet in the last decade and is responsible for a substantial
reduction in the number of daily calories consumed by the average
American child. From 2004 to 2012, children consumed 79 fewer
sugar-sweetened beverage calories a day, according to a large government survey,
representing a 4 percent cut in calories over all. As total calorie
intake has declined, obesity rates among school-age children appear to
have leveled off.
The
change is happening faster in Philadelphia than in the country as a
whole. Daily soda consumption among teenagers, a group closely tracked
by federal researchers, dropped sharply — by 24 percent — from 2007 to 2013, compared with about 20 percent for the country. Last month, the city Department of Public Health reported a sustained decline in childhood obesity over the last seven years.
Those
reductions are not accidents. The soda tax didn’t pass. But the debate
about it, along with a series of related city policies, helped
discourage people from drinking soda.
The
Philadelphia school district forbids the sale of sugary beverages in
schools and limits their availability in public vending machines. The
city provides financial incentives for corner stores to highlight
healthy foods. And it sends educators into public school classrooms to
teach children about nutrition.
Philadelphia, which also has one of the country’s strictest menu-labeling laws, for two years ran radio and television ads encouraging parents to think twice about serving sugary drinks to their children.
“It’s
a fight every day, and you just have to stick with it,” said Mayor
Nutter, who will leave office in January. “You can’t give up, because
it’s just really important.”
But
while Philadelphia’s enthusiastic attention has led to outsize results,
soda consumption is declining even in cities and towns that have not
made big local investments in obesity prevention and public health. The
public health community has coalesced around an anti-soda message, and
health officials and industry experts agree that public attitudes about
soda and consumer tastes are shifting in ways that may be permanent.
The
beverage industry continues to fight these shifts — and especially to
fight taxes on its products. But it is also aware that after decades of
selling a handful of popular, iconic products, changing public attitudes
are leading to a profound change in the nature of the business.
The New Tobacco
This
summer, executives from the beverage industry gathered at the Harvard
Club in New York City. The annual event, hosted by the trade magazine
Beverage Digest, featured speakers from the three largest soda makers —
Coca-Cola, PepsiCo and the Dr Pepper Snapple Group — along with smaller
upstarts, like SodaStream, the home seltzer maker company, and Talking
Rain, which makes no-calorie carbonated fruit drinks called Sparkling
Ice.
Along
the wood-paneled walls, croissants, fruit and silver urns of coffee
were laid out. But the hot drinks were largely ignored. The industry’s
rapidly expanding bounty was displayed in the center of the room. In an
array of ice buckets were Snapple Sorta Sweet, Squirt, Tropicana
Farmstand juices, Lipton Sparkling Iced Tea. In a back corner, attendees
could make their own lime-basil and coriander apple blossom sodas with a
SodaStream machine.
Such
events give companies a chance to show their stuff and brag about their
successes, but there was nothing bubbly about the atmosphere. This is
an industry grasping to master the shifting market.
As
John Sicher, Beverage Digest’s publisher, put it in his blunt opening
remarks: “It’s been a really challenging decade. It would have been a
lot rougher if not for bottled water.”
As
sales of the companies’ mainstay products have declined in the United
States, the companies have scrambled to offer new products better suited
to consumer tastes. Iced teas, sports drinks and flavored waters are
smaller but fast-growing segments of the beverage industry. Coca-Cola,
for example, has nearly doubled the number of individual products it
offers, to 700 this year from 400 in 2004. And companies are
increasingly experimenting with smaller packages for sodas, for which
customers will pay a higher price per ounce. At the Harvard Club, there
was a 7.5-ounce Pepsi minican, which promised “real sugar” instead of
high-fructose corn syrup, and a diminutive eight-ounce bottle of Sprite.
“There’s
consumers out there that don’t want to consume too much,” said Regan
Ebert, the senior vice president for marketing at Dr Pepper Snapple
Group, in her presentation on how the company markets its products to
Hispanic audiences. The small cans, she said, “do a good job of solving
that need for consumers.”
Explaining the disdain for sodas — sometimes called C.S.D.s, for
“carbonated soft drinks” — industry executives have noted that consumers
these days seem more interested in healthier or natural products. They
are also frank about other attitude changes that are a threat to their
businesses. “Obesity concerns may reduce demand for some of our
products” was the first “risk factor” for Coca-Cola’s business and
profitability listed in the company’s most recent annual report filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. PepsiCo and Dr Pepper
Snapple name similar concerns.
“Health
and wellness is a major enduring trend, and each brand has to compete
in that environment,” said J. Alexander M. Douglas Jr., president of
Coca-Cola North America, at a Goldman Sachs investor event in May. He
described a “secular decline in carbonated soft drinks.”
The
changing patterns of soda drinking appear to come thanks, in part, to a
loud campaign to eradicate sodas. School cafeterias and vending
machines no longer contain regular sodas. Many workplaces and government
offices have similarly prohibited their sale.
Bottlers
are feeling the changes. “We’re losing, I would say, 1.5 to 2 percent
of our business every year,” said Harold Honickman, the chairman of the
Honickman group of companies, one of the largest soda distributors in
the mid-Atlantic region.
Mr.
Honickman was an active opponent of the Philadelphia soda tax, though
he said he might have supported a national sugar tax: “People are
blaming a lot of the overweight on sugar-sweetened beverages, but
there’s ice cream and cake, and everything else that adds to the
problem.”
For
many public health advocates, soda has become the new tobacco — a toxic
product to be banned, taxed and stigmatized. It’s clear that soda’s
calories contribute to weight gain and obesity, but whether its impact
is greater than that of other unhealthy foods has not been conclusively
demonstrated. Nevertheless, the change is already underway.
“There
will always be soda, but I think the era of it being acceptable for
kids to drink soda all day long is passing, slowly,” said Marion Nestle,
a professor of nutrition at New York University. “In some socioeconomic
groups, it’s over.” Ms. Nestle’s latest book, which will be published
this month, is called “Soda Politics: Taking On Big Soda (and Winning).”
The
subtitle reflects her view that “Big Soda” is an enemy to be
vanquished, and that the industry is already losing ground to its public
health foes. Though the sharpest declines are happening among richer,
white populations, Ms. Nestle said she expected that poor and minority
customers would also reduce their soda intake over time, just as tobacco
declines occurred first among educated consumers and then spread to a
larger population.
In
Philadelphia, city officials are proud that the recently published
reductions in childhood obesity seem to be affecting minority children,
and not just white children. The prevalence of obesity among
African-American boys declined by 11.3 percent, compared with 8.1
percent for all boys from 2006 to 2013.
Dr.
Giridhar Mallya, who was until recently the director of policy and
planning for the city’s health department, credits that change to the
efforts of the public schools, which educate a disproportionate number
of minority children. Schools have overhauled menus, removed sodas from
vending machines and introduced nutrition education programs.
Donna
Smith, principal of John Wister Elementary School in North
Philadelphia, has been promoting that change for years. Her school is in
one of the poorest neighborhoods in the city — more than 96 percent of
its students qualify for free lunches. When she started there, children
often came to school carrying shopping bags from local corner stores,
full of chips and sodas or sugary fruit drinks.
She
arranged for classroom breakfast service and banned junk food. She went
to the corner store owners and asked them not to sell anything to
children in the early morning. She sent letters home. She told her
teachers they could not eat snacks in front of their students. While
schools citywide have changed their vending machine offerings, her
school has no vending machines at all, just water fountains. She told
her students she would do “whatever it is going to take to get you not
to eat that junk.”
Water on the Rise
The current anti-soda sentiment has the big soda makers worried. Even diet sodas are experiencing a sharp decline in sales.
At
the Beverage Digest conference, an entire presentation was devoted to
the diet soda problem. John Faucher, an analyst at J.P. Morgan,
described the situation as a crisis. The health-conscious consumers who
chose diet sodas in the past have become increasingly suspicious of
anything that seems artificial. Concerns about the safety of artificial
sweeteners run high, despite scant evidence they are dangerous. As consumers increasingly see soda as a vice or a luxury, they appear to be fleeing the category altogether.
“People
go toward diet, and then ‘other,’ ” said Barry M. Popkin, a professor
of nutrition at the University of North Carolina, who has measured the
calorie declines. Lately, he said, people are simply switching to water.
Water
has been the runaway success story of the industry. Gary A. Hemphill,
an industry consultant, projects that in 2017, water will surpass soda
in sales and become the largest beverage category in the United States.
Generally,
these companies worry about holding on to customers. The companies are
expanding sales overseas, which has helped buoy their stock performance
over the period. But in the United States, they all worry about losing
even nontraditional drink sales to a competitor. Someone might be a
die-hard Coke fan, but prefer Snapple iced tea to Honest Tea, which is a
Coca-Cola brand.
That anxiety may help explain the industry’s vehemence about fighting soda taxes. The three largest soda manufacturers have entered a voluntary agreement
that requires each company to reduce the total number of calories per
person it sells by 20 percent by 2025. They have also made investments
in obesity research and have spoken about their commitment to offering
healthy choices.
Executives
at all the companies are eager to point to their lower-calorie and
all-natural products as profitable lines of business. PepsiCo, for
instance, often says that carbonated soft drinks represent only 25
percent of the company’s net revenue. But the industry still fights any
public policy efforts to discourage customers from consuming sodas.
“That’s existential,” said Hank Cardello, a former food industry
executive who is now a senior fellow at the conservative Hudson
Institute.
But
there is another existential threat that could be much more hazardous
to the soda makers than a tax. Historically, beverage preferences are
set in adolescence, the first time that most people begin choosing and
buying a favorite brand. But the declines in soda drinking appear to be
sharpest among young Americans.
“Kids
these days are growing up with all of these other options, and there
are some parents who say, ‘I really want my kids to drink juice or a
bottled water,’ ” said Mr. Hemphill, managing director of research for
the Beverage Marketing Corporation. “If kids grow up without carbonated
soft drinks, the likelihood that they are going to grow up and, when
they are 35, start drinking is very low.”
Change at the Corner Store
When
Mr. Nutter was fighting the soda tax battle, he kept a bottle of
Mountain Dew and a container with 17 teaspoons of sugar — the amount in
the bottle — on the table in the center of his office. It was a good
“conversation piece,” he said, about the surprising number of calories
in a typical soda.
“Who in their right mind would ever put this much sugar into something you’re going to drink?” he said.
Now
the soda — and sugar — are tucked away in a back closet of his office.
During a recent interview, he had to ask an intern to hunt them down.
A
prop has been shelved, but the city does seem to have changed. On a
recent afternoon, I visited the Corner Food Market, a store in a poor,
largely African-American neighborhood in North Philadelphia. Fresh
apples, peaches, lettuce and green peppers were displayed on a counter
near the front of the store, in bright green baskets provided as part of
a grant program. Signs attached to the shelves highlighted low-sodium
canned goods and whole-grain products.
Rosaria
Diaz, the store’s owner, said the story of her customers’ beverage
tastes could be seen in nine refrigerated cases. At the back of the
store were her most popular items — small, sugary fruit drinks called
Little Hugs and the cheapest soda for sale — made by the
Philadelphia-based private-label company Day’s Beverages. Next was the
case of traditional sodas. And then came a similar-size display of
bottled waters — with products sold by a dozen brands. Next fruit
juices, and then fruit punches and iced teas.
Taped
on the glass refrigerator doors were signs warning customers about the
calories contained in the products inside. “Did you know it takes 65
minutes of dancing to work off a bottle of soda?” one said. The signs
are part of the healthy corner store initiative sponsored by the Food
Trust, a local nonprofit that works to promote nutritious food and
coordinates closely with the city. (“Choose water!” urged another,
handwritten sign.)
Many
urban residents do their shopping in corner stores, and the Food Trust
certifies stores, helping them find and sell healthier foods.
“We
don’t do much with campaigns to decrease soda,” said John Weidman, the
organization’s deputy executive director. “These guys have such small
profit margins that you have to couch everything in terms of, ‘This will
help your bottom line.’ ” In other words, the organization doesn’t urge
stores to stop selling soda. Instead, he said, the goal is to nudge
customers toward healthier options, like water and low-fat milk. “It’s
mostly about getting them to try healthier alternatives,” he said.
Ms.
Diaz’s customers are not health-obsessed. At the front of the store,
shelves were packed with cakes and cookies. There were racks of chips,
an array of candy bars and a popular freezer case of ice cream. “They
eat a lot of sweets,” she said. Tobacco products, too, are a big part of
Ms. Diaz’s business.
But
Ms. Diaz said that fresh produce, a recent addition, had been a hit.
She restocks twice a week. And when it comes to beverages, she said
water sales were picking up.
“When we opened, we didn’t have the flavored water,” Ms. Diaz said. “Now we sell a lot of them.”
Hanif
Tucker, 17, stepped in and bought a large bottle of Rock Creek soda to
take home. But he said he had cut down on his soda drinking, at the
urging of his football coach. “I used to just drink straight soda all
day,” he said. He was especially fond of cream soda. “I started slowing
down about two years ago.” Now he estimates he has about two sodas a
week, and drinks mostly water and juice. “They said too much soda isn’t
good for you,” he said.
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