Drink Asia July August 2019 | Page 11

Coca-Cola launches sports drink Powerade in India T he local arm of American beverage maker Coca-Cola on Wednesday announced the launch of its sports beverage Powerade that will compete with rival PepsiCo’s Gatorade. The launch marks the beverage maker’s entry into the nascent sports hydration market, even as the company looks to diversify its portfolio to offer more choices to consumers in India who are seeking beverages over and above sweetened fizzy drinks. Coca-Cola India has roped ace Indian cricketer Mahendra Singh Dhoni to endorse the drink that is priced at 50 for 500 ml, and comes in two flavours, mountain blast and orange surge. The $2 billion brand, Powerade, is the official sports drink of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019. A growing population of sports and fitness enthusiasts in India is looking for evolved hydration solutions, said Anoop Manohar, director, emerging categories, Coca-Cola India. “The launch reiterates our strategy to drive growth by expanding our category play and offering consumers more of the beverages they want for every occasion in their lives,” Manohar added. Powerade contains no sugar, the company said in its announcement. Coca-Cola’s move to launch the brand in India comes at a time when increasingly consumers in urban India are The beverage maker has initiated talks with its existing independent franchise bottlers for the divestment.  seeking variety in both packaged foods and beverages. This is especially true for consumers looking at healthier options in a shift from consumption of sweetened beverages. Over the last few years Coca-Cola has expanded its portfolio to include more hydration or functional beverages, and even milk-based drinks in its portfolio that until a few years ago largely consisted of aerated drinks and bottled water. The launches include hydration beverages such as Aquarius and Aquarius Glucocharge; Minute Maid smoothie and VIO flavoured milk. It has also extended the low or no sugar variant to key brands, including Thums Up, Coca-Cola and Sprite. Last year, it launched Minute Maid Vitingo. “The objective is to move away from the capital intensive, low margin business of bottling over a period of time, (and) to accelerate focus on its concentrate business,” one of the officials told ET. The beverage maker has initiated talks with its existing independent franchise bottlers for the divestment, two officials with direct knowledge of the development said. The company-owned HCCB has 18 plants and accounts for two-thirds of Coca-Cola India’s volumes. The beverages maker has 13 independent franchise bottlers. A Coca-Cola spokesperson said the company does not comment on speculative news. “Our existing bottling system is working well and has provided us with sustained growth in India. There is no development on that front and we have nothing to report on the said query,” the person said in an email revert.Last month, Coca-Cola had announced that it has dropped plans to refranchise bottling in Africa, instead opting to retain majority stake in the operations for the time being. The sell-off transactions, as and when they materialise, are expected to happen in phases to existing independent bottling partners individually, and over the long term, they said. HCCB, which reported revenues of Rs 9,082 crore in FY18 according to Registrar of Companies filings, is the US beverage maker’s single largest bottling partner in the country. C oca-Cola India has begun exploring the process of divesting its asset-heavy bottling partner Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverages’ plants in line with its global strategy to refranchise bottling across markets. Drink Asia 11 July-August 2019