Kuwait Times

Bottled water firms turn on the taps with filters, flavors, fizz

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AGerman firm backed by bottled water giant Danone plans to launch a sparkling-water machine for the home early next year, its chief executive told Reuters, squarely taking aim at PepsiCo’s SodaStream. Nestle, the bottled water market leader, is also considerin­g a machine for the home with filters, flavors and fizz that would be a smaller version of its Refill+ dispensers being rolled out in cafeterias, hotels and offices this year.

Concerns about plastic waste and the environmen­tal impact of transporti­ng bottled water are prompting more people to drink straight from the tap, which is in turn pushing water firms to come up with new products to keep customers on board. “Bottled water as we know it today, I don’t think will exist in 30 years. You will see much more point-of-use solutions like ours,” said Moritz Waldstein, chief executive of Mitte, the Berlinbase­d company backed by Danone. “I am of the strong belief that it will be a fraction of the market size that we have today,” he told Reuters.

The global bottled water market was worth $135.6 billion in 2019, according to market researcher Euromonito­r Internatio­nal, and is expected to grow to $170.9 billion by 2022, with demand expanding fastest in Asia. Like Nestle, Mitte is betting that concerns about plastic pollution and contaminat­ion of public water supplies mean consumers will want countertop devices at home that filter tap water, as well as adding fizz and flavours like SodaStream.

In 2018, a Danone fund which invests in firms responding to growing environmen­tal awareness joined a $10.6 million funding round for Mitte, which is developing a device to purify tap water and add minerals via cartridges. Danone, the world’s third-largest bottled water seller with brands such as Evian, Volvic and Badoit, had slightly lower water sales in its third quarter. It is also looking to boost plastic recycling and encourage alternativ­es - such as Mitte.

“We think there could be demand from sophistica­ted consumers who for many reasons will prefer to make their mineral water at home,” said Danone Chief Executive Emmanuel Faber. Mitte said it received extra funding from its shareholde­rs in an investment round in December, including the Danone fund, and it might raise more money as interest had been very high.

Mitte’s first machine to go on sale will both filter and carbonate water. Set to retail for about 200 euros ($220), it will mostly be sold online and Mitte will initially target top SodaStream markets such as Germany and Sweden. The company also has high hopes for the United States. When it ran an online kickstarte­r campaign to raise funds in 2017, the most pre-orders for its machines came from the United States, followed by Germany and the United Kingdom. US market fizzes Sparkling water has long been popular in western Europe but has only really taken off in North America in recent years as health-conscious consumers swap sweet colas for water, often flavoured or with infused vitamins and minerals. PepsiCo CEO Ramon Laguarta said in October that SodaStream, which it bought in 2018 for $3.2 billion, was doing better than it expected, particular­ly in western Europe, Japan and Canada.

He said SodaStream was planning “transforma­tional programs” in 2020 to boost penetratio­n in the US market, where Costco, Home Depot and Kohl’s and Target currently sell it, with a basic device costing about $85. Nestle is also making a renewed drive to revive US sales, where it has lagged rivals such as PepsiCo, LaCroix and Coca-Cola in the sparkling and flavored water market.

In October, Nestle said it was overhaulin­g its water division, which generates 9 percent of group sales, after it posted growth of just 0.5 in the first nine months of 2019. Federico Sarzi Braga, the new head of Nestle’s water business, told Reuters in his first interview that it would put more focus on its premium sparkling water brands Perrier and S.Pellegrino in the United States.

“The value we can get from functional and flavored water is much higher,” he said. “So we play strongly in the premium and super premium segment, especially in sparkling.” Sarzi Braga, an Italian who started out with Nestle in 2000 at S.Pellegrino, said products launched last year in the United States - including Perrier mixed with fruit juice and flavored S.Pellegrino Essenza - were selling very well.

US sales of flavored, sparkling and functional water water with added vitamins and minerals - rose 8 percent last year to represent 30 percent of the US bottled water market, outpacing the overall market which grew 3.6 percent, said Euromonito­r Internatio­nal. The flavoured, sparkling and functional category already makes up 45 percent of bottled water sales in western Europe and almost 75 percent in the world’s biggest sparkling water market, Germany.

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