There are staggering amounts of sugar found in high street chain’s hot drinks.
Campaign group Action on Sugar said that there is ‘dangerously’ high sugar content in some flavoured coffees and other hot drinks.
The charity performed analysis on 131 hot flavoured drinks and found that 98 per cent of the drinks tested would receive a red nutritional value label for high sugar content.
A third of the hot drinks tested contain the same amount or more sugar than Coca Cola – which contains nine teaspoons of sugar per can, according to the group’s spokesperson.
The drinks assessed included flavoured coffees like mochas and lattes, hot fruit drinks and hot chocolates among others which are widely bought from some of the UK’s best known coffee shops and fast food chains such as Costa Coffee and Starbucks.
The drink which was found to have the highest sugar content was
Starbucks’ venti Grape with Chai, Orange and Cinnamon Hot Mulled Fruit,
which had a total of 25 teaspoons of sugar per serving, the campaign
group said.
Costa’s massimo eat-in Chai Latte was found to contain 20 teaspoons of sugar while Starbucks’ venti White Chocolate Mocha with Whipped Cream was found to have 18, a spokesman added.
KFC’s mocha and Starbucks’ Signature Hot Chocolate both had 15 Teaspoons of sugar per serving while Caffe Nero’s drink-in Caramelatte had 13, Action on Sugar said.
Professor Graham MacGregor, chair of Action on Sugar, said: ‘This is yet again another example of scandalous amount of sugar added to our food and drink.
‘David Cameron now has all the evidence to make the UK the first country in the world to stop the obesity and type 2 diabetes epidemic.’
Costa’s massimo eat-in Chai Latte was found to contain 20 teaspoons of sugar while Starbucks’ venti White Chocolate Mocha with Whipped Cream was found to have 18, a spokesman added.
KFC’s mocha and Starbucks’ Signature Hot Chocolate both had 15 Teaspoons of sugar per serving while Caffe Nero’s drink-in Caramelatte had 13, Action on Sugar said.
Professor Graham MacGregor, chair of Action on Sugar, said: ‘This is yet again another example of scandalous amount of sugar added to our food and drink.
‘David Cameron now has all the evidence to make the UK the first country in the world to stop the obesity and type 2 diabetes epidemic.’
Action on Sugar researcher Kawther Hashem added: ‘Coffee shop chains must immediately reduce the amount of sugar in these hot drinks, improve their labelling and stop selling the extra-large serving sizes.
‘These hot flavoured drinks should be an occasional treat, not an “everyday” drink.
‘They are laden with an unbelievable amount of sugar and calories and are often accompanied by a high sugar and fat snack.
‘It is not surprising that we have the highest rate of obesity in Europe. Our advice to consumers is to have a plain hot drink or ask for your drink to contain a minimal amount of syrup, preferably sugar free, in the smallest serving size available.’
Sugar intake
According to the NHS, added sugars shouldn’t make up more than 5 per
cent of the calorie intake you get from food and drink each day.
This amounts to about 30g of sugar a day for those aged 11 and over.
This amounts to about 30g of sugar a day for those aged 11 and over.
‘We also offer a wide variety of lighter options, sugar-free syrups and sugar-free natural sweetener and we display all nutritional information in-store and online.’
While Kerry Parkin, head of communications at Costa, added: ‘Costa takes the nutritional balance of our food and drink very seriously and we have already taken significant steps to reduce the sugar content of our ranges.
‘We intend to continue improving the balance of our product offerings while maintaining the high quality and great taste our customers expect. This April we will be setting salt and sugar reduction targets for 2020.’
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