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22% of US calories come from drinks

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Counting calories from Shutterstock
Counting calories from Shutterstock
The What America Drinks report was commissioned by the Milk Processor Education Program (MilkPEP) and found that beverages account for 22 percent of calories in the average American diet.

While functional beverages - using ingredients from soy, to pomegranate, to acai - have experienced large market growth in recent years, this current report could prod marketers to get the message out to consumers to choose nutritional beverages.

Nearly 50 percent of Americans aged four and above consume sugary soft drinks on any given day, according to MilkPEP.

With almost a third of the US population obese, getting healthier drinks to consumers could become a growing concern.

36% of all added sugars to diet

In the US, soft drinks add 36 percent of all added sugars to the American diet, MilkPEPS said. Mean regular soft drink intake per capita was calculated at 12 fluid ounces (360ml) per day, or one and a half glasses.

According to the report, 28 percent of Americans consume fruit or vegetable juices, from which they derive only 2 percent of their total calories, but 28 percent of their vitamin C intake.

While beverages with nutritional value-added appeal make inroads into the mainstream market, other players are proposing to actually burn calories through their beverages.

Controversial products such as newly-launched Celsius or Coca-Cola's and Nestle's Enviga bring the promise of negative calories through green tea extracts with EGCG.

Water still the nr. 1 beverage

Nutritional experts have long touted the benefits of quenching your thirst with water, however, it would appear consumers crave the taste of flavoured beverages instead.

The Mayo Clinic recommends people drink water with each meal and between each meal. “To ward off dehydration and make sure your body has the fluids it needs, make water your beverage of choice,” reads the Clinic’s website.

“Pure water is your best bet,” writes health guru Dr Andrew Weil in his bestseller Eating Well for Optimum Health.

What America Drinks analysed data from over 10 000 Americans aged four and older who participated in the government’s National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 1999-2000 and 2001-2002. - (Decision News Media, January 2007)

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