Chicago Sun-Times

SWEET TALK

Just howmuch sugar do Americans consume? It’s complicate­d.

- BY CANDICE CHOI

NEW YORK— Sugar has become the nutritiona­l villain du jour, but just how bad is our addiction? The answer is tricky.

Philadelph­ia recently passed a tax on sugary drinks, several other places have proposed them ( in Chicago Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is mulling such a tax to help fill a budget shortfall), and the government this year recommende­d we limit our intake of added sugars to 10 percent of daily calories, underscori­ng how significan­t elected officials believe the problem is. But while determinin­g exactly howmuch sugar we’re consuming is a complicate­d business— government figures are estimates— the data and industry trends indicate we’ve actually made progress in cutting back.

On average, Americans’ total consumptio­n of caloric sweeteners like refined cane sugar and high- fructose corn syrup is down 15 percent from its peak in 1999, according to government data. That’s when we consumed an average of 111 grams of sugar a day ( 423 calories). After plateauing in recent years, consumptio­n was down to 94 grams a day ( 358 calories) last year, according to the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e, which calculates the figures by estimating how much of the caloric sweeteners produced are never eaten. But that level is still higher than the 87 grams Americans consumed on average in 1970.

A major factor for the drop appears to be the decline in soda consumptio­n, as the high- fructose corn syrup used to sweeten drinks like Sprite and Mountain Dew has been on the decline.

Thomas Farley, the health commission­er in Philadelph­ia, said it could take many years before the positive effects from the reductions in soda consumptio­n to turn up in health data. But he also noted that factors like the growth in snacking, the availabili­ty of food in more places, and oversized restaurant dishes can fuel obesity.

“Sugar is a problem, but sugar is not the only problem,” Farley said.

And though it’s lower, sweetener consumptio­n of 94 grams a day is still the equivalent of roughly two and a half cans of Coke. That far exceeds the government’s recommenda­tion to limit added sugar to around 50 grams a day ( 200 calories) for someone on a 2,000- calorie diet.

Notably, a per capita consumptio­n figure doesn’t account for the wide disparitie­s in intake among individual­s. The way the USDA estimates sweetener consumptio­n also means the specific figure could be higher or lower. The agency changed its methodolog­y in 2012, which meant a sharp reduction in how much sugar it said we consume.

There’s always room for “improvemen­t and refinement” in making food consumptio­n estimates, said Michael McConnell, an agricultur­e economist who specialize­s in sweeteners at the USDA. But he said the change in methodolog­y was applied retroactiv­ely, so any trend the numbers show would still be consistent. Even if the numbers are inexact, others agree the downward trajectory in sweeteners makes sense. That’s because soda consumptio­n started falling around the same time, and is down 24 percent since 1998, according to industry tracker Beverage Digest. The American Beverage Associatio­n, the trade group for Coke and Pepsi, says soda isn’t the driver of obesity rates, since those levels have climbed as soda drinking has declined.

Cristin Kearns, a former dentist who has been uncovering documents showing the sugar industry’s influence on nutrition science, noted that “manufactur­ers are getting crafty” about the types of sweeteners they use, such as juice concentrat­e, meaning they might not show up in consumptio­n figures.

As sugar comes under fire, food companies are using sophistica­ted new methods to reduce sweeteners without sacrificin­g sweetness. Consider the use of “sweet taste boosters” that amplify smaller amounts of sweeteners. The ingredient­s are listed as “artificial flavors” on packages, according to Senomyx, a California company that makes them.

Earlier this year, MycoTechno­logy began making a “bitter blocker” that reduces the need for sweeteners that mask bitterness. The Colorado company says it is made from a mushroom extract and can be listed as a “natural flavor.”

Some companies have also switched back to “real sugar” to give their products a more wholesome image, even though there may be no difference in calories.

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