Vancouver Sun

Packaged food firms shun sugar, salt to cater to healthier palates: study

- HOLLIE SHAW Financial Post hshaw@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/HollieKSha­w

Packaged food companies and retailers changed the recipes of more than twice the amount of products in 2016 compared with the year before to meet a growing consumer demand for healthier food, according to a new report.

Companies including Walmart, Dole, Smucker’s and PepsiCo altered 179,600 products to reduce the level of ingredient­s such as salt, sugar and saturated fat in 2016, up from 84,000 reformulat­ions in 2015, according to the Consumer Goods Forum, a non-profit global trade associatio­n. The numbers also track a swift upward trajectory from 2014, when 22,500 products had their recipes rejigged.

The most-removed product ingredient cited by manufactur­ers and retailers in 2016 was sodium, cited by 67 per cent, followed by sugar at 61 per cent and saturated fat at 50 per cent, the report said.

Conversely, whole grains and vitamins were the most likely new ingredient­s added to boost the nutritiona­l profile of food, at 25 per cent and 20 per cent, respective­ly.

“Salt and sugar — the two are the new tobaccos” in terms of consumer perception, said Sylvain Charlebois, agricultur­e expert and dean of management at Dalhousie University in Halifax. “The centre of the store is changing. Health and well-being are aspects that consumers are looking for (in products) and those will occupy the centre store more in the future and that also plays into the grocers’ own strategies around private labels,” he said. “And because the line between food service and food retail is blurring, grocers are trying to take advantage of that trend of offering consumers ready-to-eat, healthy products.”

That has played out at Loblaw Cos., which has converted dozens of its Shoppers Drug Mart stores across the country to incorporat­e fresh convenienc­e food. While Shoppers has long been a convenienc­e destinatio­n for packaged snacks, there has been significan­t fresh food growth at the drug and cosmetics retailer.

“We have strong growth pretty much across the board in the front store at Shoppers Drug Mart,” Loblaw chief executive Galen Weston told investors on the company’s third-quarter conference call last November. “We think part of what is driving that is the enhanced (fresh) food propositio­n that may actually be driving more traffic, more visits,” and that volume seemed to lead to higher sales in other categories, he said.

The trend also highlights the response from grocery retailers and food manufactur­ers to the so-called “centre-store erosion” in grocery stores, a phenomenon that has seen consumers eschew packaged goods in favour of fresh food and the ready-to eat foods on the periphery of the stores.

Sales of packaged foods have been tepid in Canada for years, growing at a combined annual rate of 2.4 per cent per annum between 2011 and 2016, according to market research firm Euromonito­r.

Retailers and manufactur­ers are increasing­ly teaming up in order to influence communitie­s “across a broad and more holistic set of health indicators,” the Consumer Goods Forum report noted.

“We aim to oversee the design and execution of several collaborat­ive pilots to test the hypothesis that retailers and manufactur­ers can jointly create healthier practices and help people live healthier lives.”

Unilever — maker of products such as Knorr soups, Lipton teas, and Dove skin products — has posted its commitment to making healthier food on its website.

“More than 1.9 billion adults, 39 per cent of the global population — are overweight and 13 per cent are obese,” the site says. Unilever says by 2020, it will double the proportion of its food portfolio that meets the highest global nutrition standards.

“The business case is compelling. We have seen that by promoting hygiene and nutritious food, sales increase,” Unilever says.

The Consumer Goods Forum is comprised of about 400 members including retailers, manufactur­ers and consumer service businesses.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Companies such as Smucker’s have changed their recipes to boost the nutritiona­l appeal of their products.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Companies such as Smucker’s have changed their recipes to boost the nutritiona­l appeal of their products.

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