The Star Early Edition

‘We will help draft new liquor rules’

- Wendell Roelf

THE LIQUOR industry would help craft stricter alcohol advertisin­g rules in a bid to prevent the government from raising the minimum drinking age to 21 from 18, an industry official said on Friday.

South Africa already has laws that prohibit underage drinking and drink driving, but critics say these are poorly enforced and often completely ignored.

In its 2014 global liquor outlook, the World Health Organisati­on said South Africans consumed a total of 27.1 litres of alcohol per capita in 2010, versus a global average of 6.2 litres of alcohol a year for those aged 15 and older.

The industry, which estimates its worth in the economy at R333 billion a year and includes firms such as SABMiller, Pernod Ricard and wine producers, has offered to regulate marketing jointly with the government in an attempt to head off a ban.

“We need to find a balance. We can’t destroy an industry that brings money into the fiscus (national budget), but we also can’t turn a blind eye to problems associated with abuse,” Kurt Moore, the chairman of the liquor industry task team, said.

He said alcohol producers were trying to find a way to restrict radio, television and outdoor advertisin­g but had yet to agree exactly how this could be done.

“The industry is of the view that self-regulation and government oversight do not represent two opposite and mutually exclusive alternativ­es,” he said.

The industry had also proposed fines for members who failed to enforce any restrictio­ns agreed by the sector, “while repeat offenders could lose their (liquor) licences”.

Public health officials in South Africa say regulation of alcohol consumptio­n and education about its abuse have failed to keep pace with the investment by companies. “

The liquor policy can address the socio-economic costs and harms associated with liquor abuse,” Clementine Makaepea, director of policy and legislatio­n at the Department of Trade and Industry, said.

Besides banning liquor outlets within 500 metres of schools and places of worship, the government proposes holding alcohol firms liable for damages and harm caused if a drunk person commits a crime or is involved in an accident. – Reuters

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