Jamaica Gleaner

Caribbean Flavours woos manufactur­ers to cut sugar content

- Steven Jackson/ Senior Business Reporter

HEALTH MINISTER Dr Christophe­r Tufton is advising manufactur­ers to reduce the sugar content in beverages they sell and market in Jamaica, underscori­ng that by so doing, it will increase a product’s competitiv­eness.

It comes amid a global trend in which government­s are urging manufactur­ers to reduce the sugar content in their products in order to avoid taxes being levied on them, he said.

“If you follow the trend and start voluntaril­y, then it will make yours a better product, a better brand, and, frankly speaking, a more competitiv­e brand, because consumers like when producers and suppliers demonstrat­e that they don’t just have a good product, but also have their best interests at heart,” said Tufton, who was addressing a seminar convened by Caribbean Flavours and Fragrances (CFF) at the Knutsford Court Hotel in New Kingston, where it urged producers to apply new flavours to reduce sugar content.

NO NICODEMUS MOVE

The Ministry of Health said it will allow time for manufactur­ers to make adjustment­s as well as reformulat­ions to and rebranding of their products.

“This [is being done] so you have time to adjust. We understand that there are stock and cost implicatio­ns. We also understand that the taste profile has to be acceptable to the consuming public,”Tufton added.

He indicated that there’s a global trend in offering beverages with reduced sugar content and that government­s have been taxing those above a certain threshold.

“We wouldn’t be acting like Nicodemus in the night and take an approach to impose taxes without consultati­on and so on,” he said.

“It is just a matter of time before fiscal measures are going to be examined as a serious option to put in place [measures to reduce] sugary drinks and that is a trend that is globally taking place,” the Health Minister emphasised.

He indicated that a tax is usually applied above a certain threshold of sugar level.

“The fiscal measure would be applied based on the quantity of sugar in your drink,” stated Tufton, who also called for a ban on sodas in and around schools.

CFF invited more than 20 manufactur­ers to discuss reformulat­ing their products with less sugar without losing the taste profile, They already use CFF for flavours but not the natural flavour products aimed at mimicking sugar ‘Flavour Fit’ without it being an artificial sugar,” said Derrick Cotterell, managing director at CFF.

“It is a major move by the manufactur­ers to be proactive and begin the process of reducing sugar in their products,” Cotterell told the Financial Gleaner in an interview during the seminar.

Jamaicans reportedly consume more than two billion eight-ounce servings of sugary drinks per year. The World Health Organizati­on has asked member states to develop guidelines to reduce the sugar content in food and nonalcohol­ic beverages. Part of those guidelines included recommenda­tions for countries like Jamaica to consider the implementa­tion of taxes and subsidies.

Last week, LASCO Manufactur­ers

announced that it has reduced the sugar content in its core product line.

The company said it introduced low-sugar variants in its flagship LASCO Food Drink range, which it said has 50 per cent less sugar than the original products. It said that translates to 11 grams of sugar per serving, similar to the sugar content of Lasoy Milk Free, which is considered a low-sugar product.

In January this year, Finance Minister Audley Shaw issued a stern warning to manufactur­ers to lower the sugar content in their beverages going forward and not to wait on the Government to implement taxes.

“I am saying to manufactur­ers today, you can either respond voluntaril­y, or we as a government can respond to the needs of the country through appropriat­e policy prescripti­ons,” said Shaw, while addressing a scientific symposium aimed at looking at fiscal measures to prevent obesity and noncommuni­cable diseases in Jamaica.

“Fair warning, therefore, is being given today. Star t the process. Don’t wait for the tax act to come,” he urged.

 ??  ?? Derrick Cotterell, managing director of Caribbean Flavours and Fragrances.
Derrick Cotterell, managing director of Caribbean Flavours and Fragrances.

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