Price of full sugar vs 'diet' drinks

Price of full sugar vs 'diet' drinks

Author
Discussion

theplayingmantis

Original Poster:

4,880 posts

96 months

Wednesday 14th August 2019
quotequote all
i thought with sugar tax all full fat varieties of soft drinks cost more than their diet brothers. however in Waitrose full sugar 500ml bottle of Orangina is £1 whereas diet is £1.37.

any reason for this? (other than a job lot of soon to be out of date full sugar that needs shifting)


yes its been a slow day...

HTP99

23,873 posts

154 months

Wednesday 14th August 2019
quotequote all
I don't get this sugar tax; Sainbury's a 500ml bottle of Coke is around £1.60 or a I can get a litre or 750ml (depending on the promotion), for £1.00.

ZedLeg

12,278 posts

122 months

Thursday 15th August 2019
quotequote all
Most full fat soft drinks reduced sugar and bumped up the sweeteners to avoid the tax, Barr ruined Barr Cola and Red Kola with the sweeteners.

Coke and Pepsi are the only ones out the the big brands that still only use sugar iirc, that's why the full fat ones are more expensive than the diet ones.

theplayingmantis

Original Poster:

4,880 posts

96 months

Thursday 15th August 2019
quotequote all
ZedLeg said:
Most full fat soft drinks reduced sugar and bumped up the sweeteners to avoid the tax, Barr ruined Barr Cola and Red Kola with the sweeteners.

Coke and Pepsi are the only ones out the the big brands that still only use sugar iirc, that's why the full fat ones are more expensive than the diet ones.
must be the case with my orangina its only 20kcal per 100ml. sure a bottle of full fat would have been 150+ back in time

anonymous-user

68 months

Friday 16th August 2019
quotequote all
And I now notice 330ml cans of Coke are becoming rarer. Many chains and supermarkets now stocking either plastic bottles or thin 250ml ones that are no use to man or beast. I despair!

- edited, because I typed 'come' instead of 'Coke' and I don't think the two should be mixed.

Edited by janesmith1950 on Friday 16th August 06:52

HTP99

23,873 posts

154 months

Friday 16th August 2019
quotequote all
janesmith1950 said:
And I now notice 330ml cans of come are becoming rarer. Many chains and supermarkets now stocking either plastic bottles or thin 250ml ones that are no use to man or beast. I despair!
Yep, the JS Local near work doesn't stock cans of full fat Coke but they do have cans of diet, however they stock 500ml bottles of full fat Coke and diet, problem is I find the 500ml bottle too much, preferring a 330ml amount.



Gecko1978

11,224 posts

171 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Tax now being added to dairy based drinks

Mammasaid

4,702 posts

111 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Consultation now in progress about adding to dairy based drinks
EFA.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpwzekdznldo

Lucky_Jim

41 posts

54 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Tax now being added to dairy based drinks
lol.

Lucky_Jim

41 posts

54 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Tax now being added to dairy based drinks
lol.

EmailAddress

14,387 posts

232 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
You've been laughing for nearly two hours, are you okay?

theplayingmantis

Original Poster:

4,880 posts

96 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
They better not reformulate chocomel, yop or shaken udder, bstards.

All because a load of fatties have no will power. Ruin it for everyone.

Yazoo and frijj are already undrinkable pale imitations of the rich gloop of my 90s childhood, now they want to ruin the few nice ones.




Edited by theplayingmantis on Tuesday 29th April 17:07

Mobile Chicane

21,476 posts

226 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
They'd better not fk about with Rose's Lime Cordial.

The middle classes will revolt.

JimmyConwayNW

3,224 posts

139 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Does sugar and dairy tax exist elsewhere or is it just the brits that can't control themselves?

HTP99

23,873 posts

154 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Has this "sugar tax" actually reduced the intake of sugary drinks?

RobbieTheTruth

1,969 posts

133 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
theplayingmantis said:
i thought with sugar tax all full fat varieties of soft drinks cost more than their diet brothers. however in Waitrose full sugar 500ml bottle of Orangina is £1 whereas diet is £1.37.

any reason for this? (other than a job lot of soon to be out of date full sugar that needs shifting)


yes its been a slow day...
Orangina isn't full sugar anymore.

Like everything (apart from Coca Cola original) - they succumbed to the sugar tax and dropped to below 5%.

Even Pepsi has now blended sugar with artificial sweetener.

Slow.Patrol

1,651 posts

28 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
Slightly off topic, but I've had IBS for years.

Following an operation, I had to drink plain water rather than my normal "no added sugar, but loads of sweetener orange squash". I would usually drink about two pints a day.

Guess what - no IBS. So probably the artificial sweetener.


Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
I wish they'd fk off with all this bks.

theplayingmantis

Original Poster:

4,880 posts

96 months

Tuesday 29th April
quotequote all
RobbieTheTruth said:
theplayingmantis said:
i thought with sugar tax all full fat varieties of soft drinks cost more than their diet brothers. however in Waitrose full sugar 500ml bottle of Orangina is £1 whereas diet is £1.37.

any reason for this? (other than a job lot of soon to be out of date full sugar that needs shifting)


yes its been a slow day...
Orangina isn't full sugar anymore.

Like everything (apart from Coca Cola original) - they succumbed to the sugar tax and dropped to below 5%.

Even Pepsi has now blended sugar with artificial sweetener.
bit late but thanks!

but still the new full fat would expect to be more than the actual diet. will have a look in waitrose. edit no i wont didnt relaise it was 2019 post!

assume french orangina is still proper stuff...

pepsi is travesty used to prefer it to coke, now undrinkable swill, that said the pepsi max/diest strawberries and cream is drinkable and reminds one of the old chip shop odd sized cans of ones youth of pepsi tropical and pepsi strawberry, albeit with the sweetener let down taste kicking in after a bit.

Tisy

564 posts

6 months

Wednesday 30th April
quotequote all
HTP99 said:
Has this "sugar tax" actually reduced the intake of sugary drinks?
Of course not. Because it has nothing at all to do with our caring government overlords being concerned for our health, but everything to do with their rich pals at Big Food Co. lobbying them to stamp out natural sugar use and instead get them to use their sugar-flavoured chemicals that they can manufacture for buttons and make themselves and all their shareholders very rich.