| Soda 
                              Sales Go Flat, Industry Fights Back
  
                              By Christopher 
                              WanjekLiveScience's Bad Medicine Columnist
 On 
                              the surface it seemed like a double blow to the 
                              soda industry.  
 According to data released earlier this month by 
                              Beverage Digest, an industry trade journal, the 
                              number of cases of soda sold in the United States 
                              has declined for the first time in 20 years.  
                              In case your subscription to Beverage Digest has 
                              lapsed, I'll share the figures.  The case volume 
                              in 2005 was down 0.7 percent, to a mere 10.2 billion 
                              cases of soda.
 
 A study in the journal Pediatrics this month showed 
                              a direct correlation between weight gain in teenagers 
                              and the consumption of soda and other sugary drinks.
 
 In case your subscription to Pediatrics has lapsed, 
                              too: The study involved 103 teenagers who were regularly 
                              consuming about 350 calories worth of sugary drinks 
                              a day.  Half of these kids were given a supply 
                              of bottled water, unsweetened teas and other non-caloric 
                              drinks for 25 weeks.  This led to an 82 percent 
                              drop in the consumption of the sugary stuff and 
                              a weight loss of about a pound a month.  There 
                              was no weight loss, of course, in the control group.
 
 But before you shed a tear for the soda industry, 
                              keep in mind the underreported fact that while sales 
                              were down last year, sales revenue went up because 
                              the prices were higher.  And Coca-Cola and 
                              PepsiCo own over half the bottled water market, 
                              anyway, as well as a considerable amount of the 
                              tea trade.
 
 Nevertheless, the American Beverage Association, 
                              a lobbying group for the beverage industry, quickly 
                              lashed out at the study with this classic, pro-industry 
                              statement:  "It stands to reason that 
                              anyone could lose weight if calories from any certain 
                              food or beverage are removed and not replaced by 
                              other calories.  Soft drinks are not distinctive 
                              in this regard."
 
 That's right.  And how bad is smoking for you, 
                              really, when you replace it with eating dioxin?
 
 This is industry smokescreen and bad medicine.  
                              At issue here is the concept of empty calories.  
                              Sugary drinks offer little nutritional value.  
                              They are liquid candies.  A 20-ounce bottle 
                              of regular soda pop contains nearly 70 grams of 
                              sugar, almost five tablespoons.  A gram is 
                              about the weight of a raisin.  Fill a glass 
                              with 70 raisins, and you'll get an idea of how much 
                              sugar you're ingesting when you drink soda.
 
 Think back to those kids drinking 350 calories a 
                              day.  The average person needs about 2,000 
                              to 2,200 calories a day.  So more than 15 percent 
                              of these kids' calories are providing no nutrients.  
                              Two 20-ounce Cokes total 500 calories, a quarter 
                              of the quota.  This is clearly not conducive 
                              to weight management.
 
 And the American Beverage Association is wrong about 
                              soda being just like any other 350 calories.  
                              Simple, processed sugars in soda, such as corn syrup, 
                              quickly raise blood sugar levels and over-tax the 
                              insulin-producing pancreas, a major cause of diabetes.
 
 The beverage industry should welcome the news of 
                              declining soda sales and adverse health affects.  
                              Bottled filtered water, as opposed to spring water 
                              and mineral water, is municipal tap water filtered 
                              to an unspecified degree (company secret).  
                              This kind of bottled water is soda without the soda, 
                              sold for about the same price.  I thought these 
                              guys would have read the soda health report and 
                              drunk it up.
    |