DutchNews, September 6, 2017
Soft drink
manufacturers have agreed to stop placing sugary drinks in vending machines and
canteens at Dutch high schools from the end of next year as part of ongoing
efforts to boost healthy diets among teenagers.
‘We want to help youngsters
make a more healthy choice,’ Raymond Gianotten, director of the soft drinks and
fruit juice association told RTL Nieuws.
The decision is part of a Europe-wide
agreement made by the industry to end the availability of sugary drinks in
schools and also falls under Dutch government efforts to offer healthier food at
school canteens, the association said.
By the end of next year, schools will
only sell soft drinks with no or few calories. Light versions of popular fizzy
drinks will remain on sale. ‘There is nothing the matter with them,’ Gianotten
said. ‘They have no sugar and few calories. You can drink them without
consuming too many calories.’
Products are classified as ‘light’ if they
contain 30% less sugar, fat or carbohydrates than the original product.
Research by public health institute RIVM in 2016 found that schools had already
been replacing unhealthy drinks in vending machines.

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