Montreal Gazette

Several U.S. states mull ‘Palcohol’ ban

Some people fear powdered alcohol could encourage teen drinking

- PETER FOSTER

Powdered alcohol — or “Palcohol” — was facing bans in several U.S. states Friday after fears the new product could encourage teenage drinking, or even the snorting or injecting of the product, which was approved for sale in the U.S. this week.

The product — a white powder — has received government approval and will be available by summer, according to the manufactur­er.

Several politician­s and children’s groups have raised concerns about the product, which has garnered huge media attention, with Chuck Schumer, the Democratic senator from New York, calling it the “Kool-Aid for underage drinking”.

Schumer said he was in disbelief that the U.S. government approved the product, which he argued posed an “immense danger” to minors because of how easily it can be concealed, snorted or mixed with food and drink.

Mark Phillips, the wine-taster and entreprene­ur who founded Lipsmark, which makes Palcohol, has said he invented the product as a way for hikers to enjoy alcoholic drinks without having to lug heavy bottles of liquor up mountains.

The government approval included powdered versions of a cosmopolit­an cocktail, a margarita, vodka and rum, although federal regulators noted that U.S. states had the power to regulate alcohol sales inside their borders.

In a promotiona­l video, Phillips admitted some of the early marketing had been “questionab­le” and warned that snorting the product was both “very painful” and pointless.

“Why would someone spend an hour of pain and misery snorting all of this powder to get one shot into their system?” he said.

So far, Alaska has already banned the powder and at least seven other states are reported to have taken, or be considerin­g taking, regulatory action against it, including Louisiana, Nebraska, Pennsylvan­ia, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia and Massachuse­tts.

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