Lethbridge Herald

Bud Light debuts bigger nutrition labels

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Beer drinkers can’t claim blissful ignorance for much longer.

Starting next month, packages of Bud Light will have prominent labels showing the beer’s calories and ingredient­s as well as the amount of fat, carbohydra­tes and protein in a serving.

Bud Light is likely the first of many to make the move. The labels aren’t legally required, but major beer makers agreed in 2016 to voluntaril­y disclose nutrition facts on their products by 2020.

Many brands, including Corona Light, Guinness, Heineken and Coors Light, already have calories and other nutrition informatio­n on their bottles or packaging. But it’s in small type, or hidden on the bottom of the six-pack, and ingredient­s aren’t listed.

Bud Light went with a big, blackand-white label, similar to the ones required by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion on packaged foods. At the top, Bud Light lists its four ingredient­s: water, barley, rice and hops. Below that, it shows the calories in a 12-ounce bottle or can (110) and other facts. Bud Light contains two per cent of the recommende­d daily amount of carbohydra­tes, for example.

“We want to be transparen­t and give people the thing they are used to seeing,” said Andy Goeler, vice-president of marketing for Bud Light.

Individual bottles and cans of Bud Light won’t have the full labels, but they’ll continue to have some nutrition informatio­n printed in small type.

Goeler said the brand’s research shows younger drinkers, in particular, want to know what’s in their beer.

“They have grown up really in tune to ingredient­s,” he said.

Goeler said he didn’t know when other brands owned by Bud Light parent AnheuserBu­sch — including Michelob and Stella Artois — would adopt bigger nutrition labels.

But the question is: Will such labels make a difference in the choices consumers make? At least one study suggests they won’t.

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