Austin American-Statesman

7-Eleven convenienc­e stores join better-for-you trend

- By Caitlin Dewey The Washington Post 7-Eleven

Like thousands of U.S. convenienc­e stores, many 7-Eleven stores cram rows of snacks between a wall of chilled sodas and a bank of churning Slurpee machines.

But starting this month, 7-Eleven will also begin selling cold-pressed juice. It’s organic, vegan, fair trade, non-GMO, gluten-free — and designed to appeal to an entirely new type of convenienc­e-store consumer.

Analysts say the launch is a tiny part of a major trend sweeping truck stops, corner stores and mini-marts from coast to coast. As sales of gas, cigarettes and soda plummet, many stores are vying for consumers with fresh produce and other “better-foryou” products that would have once looked out of place in the land of Big Gulps.

That could make a difference in the diets of millions, experts say, especially those who rely on convenienc­e stores as a primary source of food.

“There is a convenienc­e store in every community in America,” said Amaris Bradley, the director of partnershi­ps at the nonprofit Partnershi­p for a Healthier America, which has worked with stores to offer more nutritious items. “If you can transform that industry, you can make healthy options more accessible for a lot of people.”

Already, convenienc­e stores have begun to change how they do business, said Jeff Lenard, who heads strategic industry initiative­s at the National Associatio­n of Convenienc­e Stores. Nearly half of all convenienc­e stores expanded their fruit and vegetable offerings in 2017, according to a NACS survey, and thousands more introduced yogurt, health bars, string cheese, packaged salads and hard-boiled eggs.

At 7-Eleven, the world’s largest convenienc­e store chain, with

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