PepsiCo Inc. has set a target for reducing the amount of sugar in its soft drinks around the world as part of a suite of goals aimed at tackling problems ranging from obesity to climate change.

The New York-based company announced yesterday that, by 2025, at least two-thirds of its drinks would have 100 calories or fewer from added sugar per 12 350ml serving, up from about 40 per cent now.

The move, which it plans to achieve by introducing more zero and low-calorie drinks and reformulating existing drinks, comes as PepsiCo and rival Coca-Cola come under increasing pressure from health experts and governments who blame them for fuelling epidemics of obesity and diabetes.

PepsiCo said the new global target was more ambitious than its previous goal of reducing sugar by 25 per cent in certain drinks in certain markets by 2020.

“The science has evolved,” Mehmood Khan, PepsiCo’s chief scientific officer of research and development, said.

He gave an example of new flavour ingredients that require less sweetening, saying: “It’s not just about sweeteners, it’s about understanding the flavour ingredients and having proprietary knowledge and access to them.”

The World Health Organisation this month recommended taxes on sugary drinks, as France and Mexico have done, to curb consumption and improve health. The soft drinks industry opposes such taxes.

Despite its name, PepsiCo generates only 12 per cent of its $63 billion annual revenue from its famous cola brand. It makes 25 per cent from carbonated soft drinks such as Mountain Dew, with the rest coming from waters and juices including the Tropicana brand, plus snacks and dips such as hummus and guacamole.

Its 2025 goals also include targets for lowering sodium and saturated fat.

“These are good steps. But when we have an obesity crisis, I think there is more that we can be doing,” said Mindy Lubber, president of non-profit organisation Ceres, which pushes companies and investors to take action on sustainability.

“If a food and beverage company is not looking at nutrition, they are not looking at the direction the world is going in.”

Coke has said that by 2020 it would offer low-calorie or no-calorie options in every market as part of its sustainability goals.

PepsiCo is building on goals set out 10 years ago, which targeted nutritional, environmental and social improvements. Khan said there has also been financial progress.

He said the company has saved $600 million over the past five years from reduced water, packaging and energy use, as well as a reduction in waste. He added that, over the past decade, average returns on investments in this area have been better than the cost of capital.

Khan expects similar returns in future, which might be good news for investors, who generally don’t base investment decisions on sustainability.

“It might not be the driving factor but it might a filter,” said Morningstar analyst Philip Gorham.Other targets include a 15 per cent improvement in the water efficiency of PepsiCo’s direct agricultural supply chain in water-stressed areas by 2025 and a 20 per cent drop in greenhouse gas emissions across its supply chain by 2030.

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