Diet Pepsi quietly changes sweetener

NEW YORK (AP) - Diet Pepsi is quietly changing its sweetener, with the goal of helping the soda maintain its taste longer.
Cans of Diet Pepsi around the country now list a mix of two artificial sweeteners, a pairing that is commonly found in newer diet sodas. Previously, Diet Pepsi used only aspartame, which is sensitive to heat and breaks down more easily.
This summer, PepsiCo Inc. had declined to say whether it would go ahead with such a change after reports surfaced that it was testing the new sweeteners. Although the switch is only intended to help prevent the taste from degrading over time, companies are often sensitive to public perceptions that they might be tinkering with major brands. PepsiCo executives likely don't want to call any attention to the use of artificial sweeteners in the drink either.
When reached for comment Sunday, PepsiCo spokeswoman Andrea Canabal said that Diet Pepsi using the new sweetener mix started hitting shelves in early December. She said the new mix will be more widely available in the coming weeks.
"It's not like a light switch. It'll start appearing as shelf space clears," she said. In January, Canabal said the company is planning a major "relaunch" of the brand that will include a new logo and an ad campaign with the theme "Love Every Sip."
In addition to aspartame, cans of Diet Pepsi found in New York, Omaha, Neb., and the Bay Area now list acesulfame potassium as an ingredient. The ingredient is often used in combination with other artificial sweeteners and can be found in a wide range of foods including baked goods, chewing gum and gelatin desserts.
John Sicher, editor and publisher of the industry tracker Beverage Digest, said the synergistic effect of mixing the two sweeteners is intended to help keep the drink's sweetening power at a constant level, making it taste fresh longer.
"A change in sweetener does not change the flavor," he noted.
PepsiCo said in a statement Sunday that it was adding a "very small amount" of acesulfame potassium "to ensure consistency with every sip."
The move to improve Diet Pepsi comes amid a broader push by PepsiCo to revitalize its namesake soda, which has lost market share to Coca-Cola Co. in recent years. Under pressure from investors, CEO Indra Nooyi earlier this year announced the company would step up investment in its flagship brands.
Already this year, PepsiCo has made several splashy moves including a wide-ranging partnership with singer Beyonce and a multiyear deal with the National Football League to sponsor the Super Bowl halftime show. TV ads for Pepsi have also featured singer Nicki Minaj, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, the boy band One Direction and international soccer stars including Lionel Messi.
Whether the efforts will pay off with increased sales remains to be seen. In the latest quarter, PepsiCo said its soda volume in North America fell 2 percent, reflecting the broader decline in soft drink consumption that has plagued the industry since 1998. But the company noted that its share of the market had improved.
For now, Diet Pepsi remains the No. 7 carbonated soft drink with 4.9 percent of the market, according to Beverage Digest. That's down from 5.3 percent in 2000. Meanwhile, Diet Coke's share has increased in that time from 8.7 percent to 9.6 percent. Diet Coke, which still only uses aspartame, overtook regular Pepsi to become the No. 2 soda brand in 2010.
Coke remains No. 1 and Pepsi is No. 3.
Still, Diet Pepsi rakes in roughly $5 billion in a year in revenue and remains one of PepsiCo's biggest moneymakers. The company, based in Purchase, N.Y., also makes Frito-Lay snacks, Tropicana juices and Quaker oatmeal.
It's not the first time a soda company is tweaking the sweeteners in its drinks; PepsiCo made a similar move with Diet Mountain Dew in 2006, while Coca-Cola did the same with Diet Sprite in 2000.
Cans of Diet Pepsi around the country now list a mix of two artificial sweeteners, a pairing that is commonly found in newer diet sodas. Previously, Diet Pepsi used only aspartame, which is sensitive to heat and breaks down more easily.
This summer, PepsiCo Inc. had declined to say whether it would go ahead with such a change after reports surfaced that it was testing the new sweeteners. Although the switch is only intended to help prevent the taste from degrading over time, companies are often sensitive to public perceptions that they might be tinkering with major brands. PepsiCo executives likely don't want to call any attention to the use of artificial sweeteners in the drink either.
When reached for comment Sunday, PepsiCo spokeswoman Andrea Canabal said that Diet Pepsi using the new sweetener mix started hitting shelves in early December. She said the new mix will be more widely available in the coming weeks.
"It's not like a light switch. It'll start appearing as shelf space clears," she said. In January, Canabal said the company is planning a major "relaunch" of the brand that will include a new logo and an ad campaign with the theme "Love Every Sip."
In addition to aspartame, cans of Diet Pepsi found in New York, Omaha, Neb., and the Bay Area now list acesulfame potassium as an ingredient. The ingredient is often used in combination with other artificial sweeteners and can be found in a wide range of foods including baked goods, chewing gum and gelatin desserts.
John Sicher, editor and publisher of the industry tracker Beverage Digest, said the synergistic effect of mixing the two sweeteners is intended to help keep the drink's sweetening power at a constant level, making it taste fresh longer.
"A change in sweetener does not change the flavor," he noted.
PepsiCo said in a statement Sunday that it was adding a "very small amount" of acesulfame potassium "to ensure consistency with every sip."
The move to improve Diet Pepsi comes amid a broader push by PepsiCo to revitalize its namesake soda, which has lost market share to Coca-Cola Co. in recent years. Under pressure from investors, CEO Indra Nooyi earlier this year announced the company would step up investment in its flagship brands.
Already this year, PepsiCo has made several splashy moves including a wide-ranging partnership with singer Beyonce and a multiyear deal with the National Football League to sponsor the Super Bowl halftime show. TV ads for Pepsi have also featured singer Nicki Minaj, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, the boy band One Direction and international soccer stars including Lionel Messi.
Whether the efforts will pay off with increased sales remains to be seen. In the latest quarter, PepsiCo said its soda volume in North America fell 2 percent, reflecting the broader decline in soft drink consumption that has plagued the industry since 1998. But the company noted that its share of the market had improved.
For now, Diet Pepsi remains the No. 7 carbonated soft drink with 4.9 percent of the market, according to Beverage Digest. That's down from 5.3 percent in 2000. Meanwhile, Diet Coke's share has increased in that time from 8.7 percent to 9.6 percent. Diet Coke, which still only uses aspartame, overtook regular Pepsi to become the No. 2 soda brand in 2010.
Coke remains No. 1 and Pepsi is No. 3.
Still, Diet Pepsi rakes in roughly $5 billion in a year in revenue and remains one of PepsiCo's biggest moneymakers. The company, based in Purchase, N.Y., also makes Frito-Lay snacks, Tropicana juices and Quaker oatmeal.
It's not the first time a soda company is tweaking the sweeteners in its drinks; PepsiCo made a similar move with Diet Mountain Dew in 2006, while Coca-Cola did the same with Diet Sprite in 2000.
I wouldn't drink this stuff if they FORCED me too. Â All of these chemical products that RESEMBLE sugar are not good, and taste even worse. Science has yet to produce anything that tastes like sugar, and with no chemical side effects. Â I'll pass on the pop and have a nice Banana Smoothie from my juicer, thanks. Â Â
"A change in sweetener does not change the flavor," is a bunch of bull. I can taste the difference between cane sugar, aspartame, Sucralose, stevia, HFCS, and saccharin.  Each sweetener has a unique taste. That is why cane sugar sweetened drinks taste much better than HFCS sweetened drinks.
 @timdog I detest people who insist HFCS tastes and goes down the same as any other sugar. Really, then why do I feel distended and bloated after consuming it?
anyone that is stupid enough to ingest that crap deserves the cancer they will eventually get.
 @fourwalles Why are you wishing cancer to people you don't even know? What the hell is wrong with you people these days. Seems like being a degenerate dbag has no limits anymore
@fourwalles I deserve cancer? Did you really just wish that on someone? I hope that you have never lost anyone to cancer and that you truely don't know how horrific it is. Watch what you wish for. Life has a way of coming back around again.
 @fourwalles Actually, it never caused any cancer in humans. It is safe. It is called SCIENCE. Look it up.Â
@bab5crusade yes , please do....you might amaze yourself
 @MoonDragonWitch  @fourwalles Then your doctors are wrong and haven't read the updated science. There are tons of doctors who fail to see the updated information. Also do you take Asprin? Asprin used to be created from the bark of the willow tree. Yet with chemistry, we can make our own asprin without taking bark from a tree. So our bodies not adsorbing asprin because it wasn't naturally taken from the bark of the willow tree? Â
 @31F  @fourwalles Oh I have. Should I provide the peer review studies? Unless you believe those are fiction.Â
 @fourwalles  @bab5crusade Really? You don't trust science?Â
Â
 @bab5crusade  @fourwalles Lol, that's funny that Aspartame is safe when nearly all of my dad's doctors told him to STOP consuming it. Artificial crap doesn't break down in our bodies the same way NATURAL stuff does, our bodies are smart enough to know the difference.
 @fourwalles bab5crusade is a one hit wonder.  He'll post the first Google hit he finds, and not validate it.
@bab5crusade wow, those links are a joke - thanks for contributing.....
@bab5crusade ok so Sacharrin doesnt cause cancer either?.......WOW - you are a genius.......good luck
 @fourwalles  @bab5crusade I have. If I didn't. I would be part of the anti-science bandwagon which America loves to be part of: -Artificial sweeteners are regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.-There is no clear evidence that the artificial sweeteners available commercially in the United States are associated with cancer risk in humans.-Studies have been conducted on the safety of several artificial sweeteners, including saccharin, aspartame, acesulfame potassium, sucralose, neotame, and cyclamate.http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Risk/artificial-sweetenershttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspartame_controversyData Linking Aspartame To Cancer Risk Are Too Weak To Defend, Hospital Sayshttp://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/10/24/163559533/aspartame-and-cancer-risk-new-study-is-too-weak-to-defendScientist & Skeptic C0nc0rdance posted a great video about the myths of Artificial sweeteners. BTW he does post his citations. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VUo2XW0z218The problem with sugar is that we are eating TOO MUCH sugar. Also note HFCS is a big problem as well due to the body can't work around the high ammounts fructose. Companies use HFCS due to the fact it is cheaper than regular sugar. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-fructose_corn_syrup
Â
So, now instead of causing cancer to lab rats, they use sweetener that causes cancer to real rats. Â I dare Pepsi to use real ingredients; not happening.
 @31F Actually, it never caused any cancer in humans. It is safe. It is called SCIENCE. Look it up.Â
 @bab5crusade Geez, your reply was so wack, I have to post two.  I said lab rats, not humans lol!
 @bab5crusade Sorry dude, I looked up SCIENCE and Pepsi wasn't cited.  You need to get your facts straight lol!
 @31F No you just need to stop being so damn ignorant and stop taken health lessons from the Food Co-Op or a Homeopathy class.Â
@bab5crusade @31F Acelfame K contains the  carcinogen methylene chloride, ( thats called paintstripper )..MMMMMMmmmmm.....oh thats right , carcinogens dont cause cancer either. LOOK IT UP !
 @fourwalles  @bab5crusade  @31F Salt has chloride. Chloride is a poison. Should we all stop eating salt?Â
The only soda I'll drink is the "throwback" ones made with real sugar. No artificial sweetener that can cause cancer, and no high fructose corn syrup made from genetically modified corn that can cause organ failure, infertility, and gastrointestinal problems. Monsanto can drop dead.
Yup, there is a noticeable improvement in taste using real sugar as opposed to HFCS. Costco has Mexican coke in glass bottles. Yummy.
 @Getov Mylon
 That Mexican Coke is AMAZING as a mixer with a little Captain Morgan or Barbaross.
 @Mikeftm  @Getov Mylon I'm gonna have to co-sign on this one. Mexican Coke is a much better mixer than regular coke.