Arab Times

‘War on sugar’ slows growth in global demand

Asia, Brazil struggle to make up shortfall

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LONDON/NEW YORK, May 23, (RTRS): The “war on sugar” being waged by government­s and consumers to combat public health emergencie­s like diabetes is slowing growth in global demand, which along with other factors could signal a fundamenta­l shift in consumptio­n ahead.

Consumptio­n may grow at its slowest pace in seven years in 2017/18, according to analyst group Platts Kingsman. It forecasts a rise of 1.04 percent, nearly half the average growth of about 2 percent per year over the last decade.

“Consumptio­n is generally stagnating in developed countries,” Tom McNeill, director at commodity analyst group Green Pool, told Reuters.

Falling consumptio­n in more healthcons­cious markets has been exacerbate­d by higher prices and the use of alternativ­es like high-fructose corn syrup in developing countries that might otherwise have made up the shortfall.

Combined with weaker demand from food and beverage makers globally, this could represent a “stepchange lower” — or a fundamenta­l shift — in global consumptio­n, according to Tropical Research Services.

“So, it may be that the real longterm ‘trend’ rate of global sugar demand growth has changed and is now lower,” the group said in a May 7 report.

At least 17 countries and a number of US cities have added an extra tax on sweetened beverages. Another 11 nations are implementi­ng or considerin­g similar levies.

Many are going further: France has coupled a tax with measures like banning vending machines in schools. Chile last year introduced black stopsign warning labels on foods high in sugar, salt and fat.

Mexico is another example. With one in three adults in the country affected by obesity, the country slapped a levy on sweetened soft drinks in 2014.

Although the impact on health will take years to assess, early data shows consumptio­n of soft drinks in Mexico has fallen by 12 percent since the tax was introduced.

“There is an increasing understand­ing for the need to control intake of free sugars, in public policy and in culture in general,” said Francesco Branca, director of nutrition for health and developmen­t at the World Health Organizati­on.

“With obesity and diabetes very quickly spreading, they are trying to do something about it early on.”

The slowing pace of growth globally is adding to worries the world sugar market is headed for a surplus in 2017/18, after two consecutiv­e deficits.

It could also curtail ambitious plans by the European Union to sharply boost output in 2017/18 in an effort to again become a net exporter, after it ends subsidies and caps on exports in October.

High-income countries like Norway and Canada are already seeing a decline in sugar consumptio­n, Euromonito­r figures shows. Now the appetites of developing markets, whose rapid population growth was expected to drive future growth, also appear to be waning.

Sugar sales in India, the world’s biggest consumer, are set to fall by roughly 1 million tonnes this season, the Indian Sugar Mills Associatio­n (ISMA) estimates, due to higher domestic prices and a cash crunch that followed last year’s demonetisa­tion of high-value bank notes.

Brazil, the world’s third largest consuming nation, has also seen demand growth slow over the last three years as an enduring recession slashed the incomes of many Brazilians. Consumptio­n was growing at roughly 2-3 percent over the previous decade.

Manufactur­ers seem to think the anti-sugar movement is here to stay, and many food and beverage companies are pre-emptively reformulat­ing their products as a result.

Coca-Cola has committed to reducing sugar in its drinks, with more than 200 reformulat­ion initiative­s underway.

PepsiCo also said that by 2025 at least two-thirds of its drinks globally will have 100 calories or fewer from added sugar per 12-oz serving.

Nestle said in 2016 it is developing technology to reduce sugar in some confection­ary products by up to 40 percent without affecting the taste.

 ??  ?? Specialist Anthony Rinaldi (left), works with traders Robert Arciero (center), and James Conti at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange
on May 23. Stocks opened slightly higher on Wall Street as technology companies post more gains. (AP)
Specialist Anthony Rinaldi (left), works with traders Robert Arciero (center), and James Conti at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on May 23. Stocks opened slightly higher on Wall Street as technology companies post more gains. (AP)

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