A new way to party hard
Health experts worry spiked seltzers, other novel drinks will lead to more imbibing, deaths among youth
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. — On a quiet street corner, a sign marks the birthplace of a beverage behemoth: Here, in 1954, the Tri-City Beverage Corp. bottled its first case of Mountain Dew.
The soda was originally uncolored and lemon-lime flavored, and its inventors used it as a mixer with bourbon. “Mountain dew” is also a nickname for moonshine, which farmers sometimes processed from leftover crops. Labels on early soda bottles promised it was “specially blended in the traditional hillbilly style.”
It wasn’t until after PepsiCo bought the company in 1964 and eventually built a global youth-oriented brand, one marketed by extremesports athletes, that the soft drink left its Appalachian roots behind.
In a way, Mountain Dew came full circle last year when PepsiCo turned the brand toward a new alcoholic beverage: Hard Mtn Dew. At a One Stop Wines & Spirits frequented by students from Eastern Tennessee State University, the new cans are prominently displayed. Although the brew bears little resemblance to its ancestor, its alcoholic content is “exactly what Mountain Dew is all about,” said Charles Gordon Jr., owner of Tri-City Beverage.
Hard Mtn Dew reflects a major change in the alcohol industry, which for the past century mainly produced drinks categorized as beer, wine or spirits. In recent years, those lines have blurred, and a fourth category of ready-to-drink beverages has emerged — hard seltzers and other flavored malt beverages, wine coolers and canned cocktails. Although these products differ in primary ingredients and how the alcohol is processed, all are flavored and packaged for casual consumption.
“It’s only really in the last three to four years that it’s become a major category,” said Nadine Sarwat, a beverage analyst at Bernstein Research.
Sales of hard seltzers and ready-to-drink canned cocktails were valued at nearly $10 billion in 2021 by the Grand View Research firm, which expects them to grow by double digits in coming years. And PepsiCo and Coca-Cola have debuted alcoholic products in the U.S. market.
But as alcohol-related deaths in America reach record highs, public health experts are voicing concern that the new class of drinks could alter how people drink alcohol. Some also expressed worry that the convenience of the new products could reverse the long-term decline in alcohol consumption by young people. And recent studies show that consuming even one alcoholic drink a day increases a person’s risk of cancer and heart disease.
Coca-Cola and Monster Beverage declined repeated requests for comment, and PepsiCo referred questions about products bearing its brands to the companies that it had licensed to manufacture them.
Pamela Trangenstein, a scientist with the alcohol research group at the Public Health Institute in California, recently supervised a study at college football games. She described a sea of empty White Claw hard seltzer cans covering the floor of a student section at one stadium.
“The carbonation and sugar content can make it taste like you aren’t drinking alcohol,” she said.
A tantalizing opportunity
Americans’ drinking habits have been shifting over time. The popular practice of avoiding calories and carbs has been driving down beer’s market share for years, said Bonnie Herzog, a Goldman Sachs managing director who analyzes the beverage industry. At the same time, alcohol companies are vying to win back people under 30, who are consuming less alcohol than did previous generations at that age. And the coronavirus pandemic supercharged sales of portable products as consumers sought beverages they could drink at home.
“Health and wellness, variety, convenience — that’s the appeal,” Herzog said.
Hard Mtn Dew exemplifies these trends. It is sugarand caffeine-free, and taps into consumers’ connection to a familiar brand. Although the new product is 5% alcohol by volume, a 24-ounce can contains the equivalent of two standard drinks. Fans who got an early taste seemed to like it. “I drank Hard Mountain Dew and felt like I was staring at God,” an online reviewer wrote.
Alcohol producers such as Anheuser-Busch InBev have invested heavily in this category, but the moment has also presented soda makers with a tantalizing new market, Herzog said. In addition, manufacturers and distributors make a higher profit per case of alcoholic beverages than for nonalcoholic drinks, according to Kevin Asato, a beverage industry consultant.
In 2020, Coca-Cola paired with Molson Coors Brewing Co. to make Topo Chico Hard Seltzers, and last year, the company entered into agreements to produce Fresca Mixed cocktails, Simply Spiked Lemonade and a canned Jack & Coke.
On an earnings call Feb. 14, James Quincey, CEO of Coca-Cola, cited its “early alcohol experiments” like Jack & Coke, which is now available for purchase, as a way for the company to be “a total beverage company — everywhere.”
By licensing its soft drink brands to established alcohol makers for sale through existing distributors, CocaCola kept within the lanes of the regulatory firewalls that separate alcohol producers, distributors and retailers. This three-tier system has characterized the U.S. alcohol industry since the repeal of Prohibition and is intended to prevent a single company from suppressing its competitors.
PepsiCo, in contrast, has attached fewer of its brands to new alcoholic drinks — just Hard Mtn Dew and Lipton Hard Iced Tea, so far — but has shown greater willingness to disrupt the status quo.
The company established a wholly owned subsidiary, Blue Cloud Distribution, to keep more control over sales and marketing, and a greater share of the profits. To comply with the three-tier system, PepsiCo licensed Mountain Dew’s brand to the Boston Beer Co. and provided it with Mountain Dew flavoring. That way, PepsiCo is independent from production and can instead control distribution.
Last spring, regulators in Kentucky and Georgia denied Blue Cloud distributor licenses, ruling that Blue Cloud had blurred the lines between manufacturer and distributor. Indiana regulators denied Blue Cloud a comparable license earlier this year.
The effects on health
Excess drinking kills more than 140,000 Americans each year, according to the latest estimates, far surpassing drug overdoses or firearm deaths.
Alcohol experts take heart at the growing ranks of openly “sober curious” young people, and beverage companies are trying to tap that group with a profusion of new nonalcoholic products. But some public health experts have expressed concerns that the widening variety of alcoholic drinks could reverse those trends.
The long-term effects on drinking habits will not be known for years, according to Matt Rossheim, an associate professor at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.
“In public health, it’s constantly this game of whack-a-mole, as industry is just so quick to innovate and launch things, and then it takes us years and years to figure out what happened,” he said.
Katherine Keyes, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University, said the push into hard sodas appeared to target the female drinker, whose alcohol intake has been catching up to men’s in recent years. “A lowcalorie, flavored alcohol beverage has been their tried-and-true approach to attracting a female market,” she said.
Still, these options should not be marketed as healthy alternatives, experts said.
“The harms from alcohol don’t mainly come from calories,” said Bill Kerr, a senior scientist at the Public Health Institute’s alcohol research program. “They come from the alcohol.”