Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Soft drinks
Soft drinks - Credit: Photo: Ramon FVelasquez / Wikimedia Commons
Business
Food
soft drinks
sugar
soft drink producers
Dutch Association of Soft Drinks Water and Juice
Raymond Gianotten
nutrition professor
Martijn Katan
childhood obesity
high school
Wednesday, 6 September 2017 - 13:10

Share this article:

Dutch soft drink producers to stop selling sugary drinks at schools

By the end of next year, Dutch soft drink producers will stop selling sugar-filled soft drinks at high schools in the Netherlands, Raymond Gianotten, director of the Dutch Association for Soft Drinks Waters and Juices, said to RTL Nieuws. By the end of 2018, only light variants of soft drinks will be available at high schools.

"We want to help young people make a healthier choice", Gianotten said. "There are still some ongoing contracts, but as far as we are concerned, this will be done as soon as possible."

The producers will keep selling the light variants of their drinks. When asked whether these light variants are really better than the sugar filled versions, Gianotten said: "There's nothing wrong with them. They contain no sugar, and hardly any calories. You can drink them without getting in too much calories."

According to nutrition professor Martijn Katan, there is definitive evidence that sugar filled soft drinks and juices make you fat. He was part of a study in which a group of 320 children were given one can of lemonade with sugar, and another group of 320 children were given one can of sugar-free lemonade every day. "After one and a half years, the group who drank sugar-free lemonade picked up a kilo less than the other group."

Dutch primary school children drink between 500 ml and 750 ml of soda or juice every day, Katan said to the broadcaster. "If you halve that intake, it would result in 2 kilograms less body weight", he said. "There's nothing valuable in soda or juice that the children cannot do without."

More like this

Image
Oedipus Brewing, Amsterdam-Noord.
Dutch breweries expand into soft drinks as beer consumption declines
Image
Feeding a baby.
Most Dutch baby and child foods loaded with sugar, study finds
Image
Woman scraping food leftovers into a garbage bin
10% of Dutch food waste caused by confusion over best before date
Image
Teenage boy eating a burger and drinking a soft drink while sitting with a laptop in a food court
Half of Dutch children drink 16.5 glasses of sugary soft drinks per week
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • New Utrecht Council to push home construction, low-cost housing; Property tax up 15%
  • Wildfire risk rises as heat drives up drought pressure across the Netherlands
  • Man held for armed robbery of bound sex workers near The Hague facing 7 years in prison
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide
  • 1990 rape case brought to court after DNA breakthrough, prosecution seeks 4 years prison

Top stories

  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide
  • Dutch official joins EU talks with Taliban on return of rejected asylum seekers
  • NS cancelling trains on key routes this week due to heat; Passengers will need water
  • Heineken board taps JDE Peet’s exec. Rafa Oliveira as new CEO
  • More Dutch households can't make ends meet; Over half of young adults struggling

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content