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Beverages

  • Mintel reveals three key trends for food and beverages

    2021 will see food and drink companies create solutions catering to mental and emotional wellbeing; be challenged to respond to new definitions of “trust,” “quality” and “essential”; and cater to a growing desire to be part of a community.
  • Coca-Cola Canada makes changes to its sales team

    With its senior vice-president of sales Scott Lindsay retiring at the end of next month, Coca-Cola Canada has made changes to its executive roster.
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  • Coca-Cola recovery continues as it grows leaner in pandemic

    Coca-Cola measured gradual improvement in the third quarter as it focused on emerging leaner from the global pandemic.
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  • PepsiCo Beverages to distribute Evian in Canada

    PepsiCo Beverages Canada and Danone Waters of America (DWA), the U.S.
  • Molson and Hexo backed cannabis drinks company launches five new brands

    Competition in the cannabis beverage market is due to heat up as a company backed by Molson Coors Canada launches a group of pot drinks brands over the next few months.
  • Consumer insights: Coping through food

    As Canadians entered 2020, they could not have foreseen what the new decade would bring.
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  • Coffee sellers stop accepting reusable cups amid coronavirus

    Tim Hortons and McDonald's Canada are the latest coffee purveyors to stop accepting reusable mugs brought in by customers amid concerns about the novel coronavirus outbreak."We will continue to monitor the situation and plan to reintroduce the policy at a later time,'' wrote McDonald's Canada spokeswoman Veronica Bart in an email.Tim Hortons said in a statement that it has made the change after listening to its restaurant owners and comments from its customers, even though health officials have not recommended any changes to its current procedures.The temporary move follows similar decisions by Starbucks and The Second Cup Ltd.
  • British Columbia implements tax on carbonated beverages

    Starting on Canada Day, British Columbia will add provincial sales tax to all carbonated beverages that contain sugar.The new rules span bottled and canned soda, as well as beverages dispensed through soda fountains, soda guns and vending machines.Finance Minister Carole James announced in her budget last week that the 7% provincial sales tax will takes effect on July 1 and is expected to generate $27 million in revenues in the 2020-2021 budget year.Belgium, United Kingdom, Mexico, Chile, France, Portugal, Norway and Hungary charge an excise tax of 20% on such drinks, while eight cities in the United States also levy sugar taxes, including Berkeley, Calif., where a University of California study published last year in the American Journal of Public Health found sugar-drink consumption was down almost 52% in some neighbourhoods and water consumption was up 29%.The B.C.
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