Beverages

Beverage Industry Delivering on Commitment to Schools

Removal of regular soft drinks driving decline in calories, portions

NEW YORK -- America's leading beverage companies have delivered on a three-year commitment with the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, a joint initiative of the American Heart Association and the William J. Clinton Foundation, to remove full-calorie soft drinks from schools across the country and replace them with lower-calorie, smaller-portion beverages. As a result of the agreement, there has been an 88% reduction in calories from beverages shipped to schools since 2004, the American Beverage Association (ABA) said.

The ABA released the Alliance School Beverage Guidelines [image-nocss] Final Progress Report yesterday, confirming that the beverage industry's major companiesThe Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo, Dr Pepper Snapple Group and their systems of local bottling companies that work directly with the school partnershave transformed the beverage landscape in schools across America.

The report was prepared by the independent firm Keybridge Research LLC.

"A critical component of the Alliance's national effort to end childhood obesity has been our work with the beverage industry to reduce the amount of calories our kids consume in schools," said President Bill Clinton, founder of the William J. Clinton Foundation, who co-leads the Alliance with California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and American Heart Association president Clyde Yancy. "We are encouraged by the significant progress we've made and look forward to continuing our work with participating schools, companies and the American Beverage Association to give young people the options and opportunities they need to lead healthier lives," said Clintion.

"Our beverage companies have slashed calories in schools as full-calorie soft drinks have been removed," ABA president and CEO Susan Neely said. "The beverages available to students are now lower-calorie, nutritious, smaller-portion choices."

This report marks the third and final assessment of the impact and status of the implementation of the guidelines. In May 2006, the Alliance for a Healthier Generation worked with representatives of Coca-Cola, Dr Pepper Snapple, Pepsi and the ABA to establish guidelines that limit portion sizes and reduce the number of beverage calories available to children during the school day. As a result of the guidelines, the industry committed to changing the beverage mix in schools across America by removing full-calorie soft drinks and providing for lower-calorie, nutritious beverage options in age-appropriate portions by the beginning of the 2009-2010 school year.

"Childhood obesity is a complex problem, and there is no one single solution. The core of the problem, however, is that many of our children and youth are consuming too many calories," said Clyde Yancy, M.D., president of the American Heart Association and medical director for Baylor Heart & Vascular Institute at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. "School is a unique environment where students make food and beverage choices with limited supervision and begin to set food preferences that last into adulthood. The Alliance School Beverage Guidelines are a tool for reducing students' access to calories during the school day and changing behaviors that may lead to a lifelong improvement in caloric consumption."

Under the voluntary guidelines, 100% juice, low-fat milk and bottled water are allowed in elementary and middle schools, with the addition of diet beverages and calorie-capped sports drinks, flavored waters and teas in high schools. In addition to the removal of full-calorie soft drinks from all schools, the shift towards more lower-calorie, smaller-portion beverages is also contributing to the overall reduction in calories available from beverages in schools.

The report shows that industry delivered on several important markers: Calories available from beverages in schools have been cut dramatically. In fact, 88% fewer beverage calories were shipped to schools between 2004, the last comprehensive data available prior to the agreement, and the end of 2009. And full-calorie soft drinks have been removed. Shipments of full-calorie soft drinks to schools have declined by 95% during that time.

We have successfully changed the beverage landscape in schools across the country. The guidelines provide for a range of lower-calorie, nutritious and smaller-portion beverage options. At the beginning of the 2009-10 school year, 98.8% of schools and school districts measured were aligned to the guidelines.

Since announcing the guidelines in 2006, beverage companies have spent thousands of hours educating and training sales forces and have invested millions of dollars in retrofitting vending machines, repackaging products and reconfiguring production lines and equipment, among other activities.

Click here for a copy of the Alliance School Beverage Guidelines Final Progress Reportand for complete details on the guidelines.

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