Alcohol-flavoured fudge ‘will entice kids’
November 21st, 2010 - 1:37 pm ICT by ANIMelbourne, Nov 21 (ANI): Australian health experts have warned that alcohol-flavoured confectionery, including fudge, would aggravate the country’s ‘binge-drinking’ culture.
They have accused the makers of Jim Beam bourbon and Bundaberg rum of trying to entice children to their brands by selling fudge that tastes like alcohol, reports The Age.
Packaged in mini fridge containers, the confectionery contains no alcohol but is strongly flavoured like the popular alcoholic drinks and is on sale at supermarkets and other major stores.
The Australian Drug Foundation has condemned the products and wants them to be sold only in liquor shops.
“In the government guidelines it states that kids under the age of 18 shouldn’t drink alcohol and products like this only serve to normalise alcohol and potentially introduce kids to the idea of it and the taste of it at an early age,” said policy adviser Sarah Jaggard.
“When every state and territory’s struggling to reduce alcohol-related problems, why would you provide a link between alcohol and confectionery, which definitely appeals to kids, especially if it’s placed near Christmas stockings?” she added.
Public health campaigners have accused alcohol companies of using devious methods to bolster brand recognition among young people in a bid to get around bans on advertising to children.
Research shows that the earlier children are exposed to alcohol advertising the more likely they are to drink at harmful levels later in life.
However, Stephen Riden, spokesman for the Distilled Spirits Industry Council of Australia, which represents Beam Global Spirits and Wine and the Bundaberg Distilling Company, denied that confectionery flavoured like bourbon or whisky was designed to appeal to under-18s.
“This is a straightforward brand licensing deal where a well-known brand is licensed for another product in a completely different market,” he said.
“The confectionery is just for people who like the Jim Beam brand … There is no alcohol in them so no child is getting their hands on alcohol,” he added.
He said the fudge did not breach the industry’s self-regulated Alcohol Beverages Advertising Code, and companies did not control how stores displayed items. (ANI)
- Bethenny Frankel sells the 'Skinnygirl' brand - Mar 22, 2011
- Johnny Walker make way, bourbon will be here soon - Mar 24, 2011
- Youth exposure to alcohol ads in mags declines by 48pc: Study - Aug 11, 2010
- Now, Cupcake Vodka with 'creamy texture' - Apr 29, 2011
- New bacon soda turning New Yorkers' tummies inside out! - Nov 06, 2010
- Beverage makers set for summer war in $10 bn market - Apr 09, 2012
- Britannia may go for 6 percent overall price hike - Dec 17, 2011
- Scottish brewer Brewdog have made the strongest Beer in the word - 'The End of History' - Jul 23, 2010
- Not just plum, Christmas has more flavours this season (With Recipes) - Dec 22, 2010
- ABD launches new brandy in Kerala - Feb 02, 2012
- Got a bad hangover? Try honey on toast! - Dec 24, 2010
- New 'whipped cream with alcohol' is the latest binge-drinking tool! - Nov 29, 2010
- Brit supermarket worker sacked for drinking Lady Grey instead of store brand - Mar 29, 2011
- Adverts that won't be allowed today - Feb 20, 2012
- Rival in feni's backyard - an Indian tequila - May 01, 2011
Tags: alcohol advertising, alcohol companies, alcohol related problems, alcoholic drinks, australian drug foundation, australian health, binge drinking, brand recognition, christmas stockings, confectionery, devious methods, different market, distilled spirits industry, drink alcohol, government guidelines, health campaigners, jim beam bourbon, liquor shops, policy adviser, riden