With Soda Sales Down Anyway, Coke and Pepsi Vow to Promote Healthier DrinksAt the Clinton Global Initiative, Coca-Cola, Pepsi and Dr Pepper pledged to cut beverage calories by one-fifth in the next decade.

ByKate Taylor

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

苏打水迪公司将他们的客户et.

Coca-Cola, Dr Pepper Snapple Group, PepsiCo and the American Beverage Association pledged on Tuesday to reduce beverage calories consumer per person nationally by 20 percent by 2025.

The beverage companies plan to achieve the calorie cut by leveraging marketing and distribution to promote smaller portion sizes, water and other no- or low-calorie beverages. Companies will also provide calorie counts on all company sale equipment, including vending machines, self-serve fountain dispensers and retail coolers. Efforts will be focused in areas where there has been less interest in and/or access to lower calorie options.

The agreement was announced at the annual Clinton Global Initiative, following work with the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, an organization founded by the American Heart Association and the Clinton Foundation. In 2006, the same players established the Alliance School Beverage Guidelines, which resulted in cutting full-calorie soft drinks and providing smaller portions of lower-calorie beverages in schools across America.

Related:What Coke Is Brewing by Increasing Its Stake in Keurig

"This initiative will help transform the beverage landscape in America," American Beverage Association CEO Susan K. Neely said in astatement. "It takes our efforts to provide consumers with more choices, smaller portions and fewer calories to an ambitious new level."

However, beverage companies' decision to cut calories may not only be paying off in terms of goodwill and healthier customers. Soda sales have been plummeting as customers have become more health savvy. In 2013, soda sales reached their lowest levels in nearly two decades,Reutersreports.

The pledge states that "water and lower-calorie beverages are expected to grow significantly" over the next decade. If Coke, Dr. Pepper and Pepsi want to combat slumping soda sales, growing these markets was already part of the plan, regardless of concerns for customers' health.

Related:'We Don't Give a Sh*t About Gluten Free': A Restaurant Owner Gets Bold With Customers

Wavy Line
Kate Taylor

Reporter

Kate Taylor is a reporter at Business Insider. She was previously a reporter at Entrepreneur. Get in touch with tips and feedback on Twitter at @Kate_H_Taylor.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

What Is a 'Lazy Girl Job'? New TikTok Trend Empowers Women to Work However They Want

The trend began as a way for women to find more free time during their days.

Business Process

The Strategy You Need to Make Sure Your Company Can Keep Up in Today's Business World

Discover a superior alternative to a traditional business strategy that prioritizes adaptability, innovation and speed in execution, explores its benefits for entrepreneurs, see real-world scenarios and learn core principles and rules to propel organizations forward with clarity, simplicity and action.

Thought Leaders

I Pitched 300 People a Day For 1 Year — and Learned This Impactful Entrepreneurial Lesson

After working myself to the bone pitching 300 people each day for one year, I came out of that experience as a new man — but surprisingly, an unhappier one. Here's what I learned.

Business Ideas

The Top 10 Home Business Ideas for 2023

Can't figure out which enterprise you should launch in 2023? Check out 10 stellar home business ideas to get inspiration.

Growing a Business

3 Solutions That Help Alleviate Everyday Pressures Small Business Owners Face

We live in a world with increasing pressures from stakeholders, constantly changing customer expectations and volatile financial conditions — which for many, especially business owners — can make it hard to create clear distinctions between professional and personal emotions.