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Home » Coke’s Shift to Cane Sugar Would Be Expensive, Hurt U.S. Farmer

Coke’s Shift to Cane Sugar Would Be Expensive, Hurt U.S. Farmer

July 18, 20254 Mins Read News
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By Marcelo Teixeira, Karl Plume, and Renee Hickman

NEW YORK, July 17 (Reuters) – A possible move by Coca-Cola KO.N, and other beverage and food industries, to use cane sugar instead of corn syrup as a sweetener would be difficult and expensive to implement, while mostly negative for farmers in the U.S.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Coca-Cola had agreed to use cane sugar in its beverages in the country after his discussions with the maker of the top soda pop brand.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and activists from his Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) campaign have been pushing for changes in ingredients used by the food and beverage industry, claiming the proposed substitutes are healthier.

Kennedy has said the consumption of both sugar and high fructose corn syrup are unhealthy, and scientists say sugar presents some nutritional benefits over high fructose corn syrup.

Coca-Cola already sells Coke made from cane sugar in other markets, including Mexico, and some U.S. grocery stores carry glass bottles with cane sugar labeled “Mexican” Coke.

In response to Trump’s comment, Coca-Cola said “more details on new innovative offerings within our Coca-Cola product range will be shared soon.”

PepsiCo PEP.O also said on Thursday it would use sugar in its products like Pepsi beverages if consumers want it.

Industry analysts, however, said changes in the formulation of the rest of the Coke sold in the U.S., and other beverages and candies, would involve significant adjustments to companies’ supply chains, since corn syrup and sugar come from different producers. It would also involve changes to product labeling, and cost more.

“Food and beverage industries started to use corn syrup in the U.S. in the past because of costs. It is cheaper than sugar,” said Ron Sterk, a senior editor at SOSland Publishing, an information provider for the ingredients industry in the U.S.

He said the beverage industry uses 55% High Fructose Corn Syrup, or 55HFCS, while bakers use 42% HFCS.

The Corn Refiners Association said the complete elimination of high fructose corn syrup from the U.S. food and beverage supply would cut corn prices by up to 34 cents a bushel, resulting in a loss of $5.1 billion in farm revenue.

“The resulting economic shockwave would lead to rural job losses and significant economic consequences to communities across the country,” CRA said.

Agricultural processors such as Archer-Daniels-Midland ADM.N and Ingredion INGR.N, two of the largest HFCS producers, grind corn at mills dotted around the Midwest farm belt to produce corn sweetener and other goods like ethanol biofuel. Shares of both companies fell on Thursday.

ADM is estimated to ship 4 billion to 4.5 billion pounds of high fructose corn syrup every year, accounting for roughly 6% to 7% of projected 2026 earnings, said analyst Heather Jones of Heather Jones Research.

“If Coke were to shift the entirety of its HF55 usage to cane, the cost increase would very likely exceed $1 billion given the current price gap between HF55 and cane sugar and the probability of very large price increases for the latter,” Jones said in a research note.

To produce one pound of HFCS, the industry uses around 2.5 pounds of corn, so a large shift in corn syrup use in the U.S. would hurt demand for the cereal, hurting corn growers, while probably boosting imports of cane sugar since there is not enough produced in the U.S. to satisfy American consumers’ sweet tooth.

Sugar Deficit

Around 400 million bushels of corn are used annually to make corn syrup for drinks and other food products, representing around 2.5% of U.S. corn production, according to U.S. government data.

The U.S. produces around 3.6 million metric tons of cane sugar per year, half of that in Trump’s home state of Florida, compared with around 7.3 million tons of corn syrup.

Trump’s ongoing trade wars, however, would make it difficult to cover the deficit, sugar analyst Michael McDougall said.

“It will most likely come from Brazil,” he said, referring to the world’s top cane sugar producer, “but Trump just hit Brazil with a 50% import tariff.”

Not only does cane sugar cost more, but Coca-Cola has independent bottlers with hundreds of facilities already designed for use with high fructose corn syrup, said James McDonnell, partner at CIL Management Consultants.

A reformulation would require additional investments, said McDonnell, and it is unlikely that bottlers would want to eat the cost. Consumers will also balk at the added cost, he said, “and you thought they were angry at the price of eggs!”

(Reporting by Marcelo Teixeira, Karl Plume, Tom Polansek, Renee Hickman, and Jessica DiNapoli; Editing by Emily Schmall and Marguerita Choy)

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