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Attorney General Gansler Announces MillerCoors
to Stop Brewing All Alcoholic Energy Drinks
BALTIMORE, MD (December
18, 2008) - Today Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler announced
an agreement with MillerCoors that will result
in the nationwide discontinuance of the country’s top-selling
pre-mixed alcoholic energy drink, Sparks. As part of the 14 state
agreement, MillerCoors will not produce any caffeinated alcohol
beverages in the future.
In early 2008, published
research about the dangers of these products and concerns about
the way the products were being marketed
led Attorneys General to initiate an investigation into the content
and marketing of MillerCoors Sparks brand products, which include
Sparks Original, Sparks Light, Sparks Plus, and an unreleased higher
alcohol product called Sparks Red. In January, Gansler’s
office issued an investigative subpoena to MillerCoors pursuant
under Maryland’s Consumer Protection Act. The investigation
focused on false and misleading health-related statements about
the energizing effects of Sparks brand products and on allegations
that MillerCoors was marketing the products to an underage audience.
“I am gravely concerned about pre-mixed alcoholic energy
drinks,” said Attorney General Gansler, Co-Chair of the National
Association of Attorneys General Youth Access to Alcohol Committee. “These
amped-up-alcopops that look like non-alcohol energy drinks are
popular with young people who wrongly believe that the caffeine
will offset the intoxicating effects of the alcohol. These beliefs
are fueled by unconscionable aggressive marketing campaigns that
target our youth and promise endless nights of fun and enhanced
abilities.”
The settlement announced today specifically addresses concerns
about the marketing of Sparks. Although MillerCoors denied acting
improperly, it agreed to stop using images that imply power (like
the battery-themed +/- symbols on the can) and that appeal to underage
youth to market the product. MillerCoors also agreed not to renew
its contract with William Ocean, a MillerCoors-sponsored air guitarist
who back flips onto an opened can of Sparks at his shows, and to
immediately discontinue the Sparks website. MillerCoors also agreed
to reformulate Sparks brand products without caffeine or other
stimulants and agreed not to produce any other caffeinated alcohol
beverages in the future.
“Alcohol mixed with high amounts of caffeine is a recipe
for disaster, particularly in the hands of young people,” said
Attorney General Gansler. “Caffeine gives drinkers the false
belief that they can function normally, making them more likely
to make unsafe decisions which can result in serious harm to themselves
and others.”
A recently published study found that college students who mix
alcohol and energy drinks engage in increased heavy episodic drinking
and have twice as many episodes of weekly drunkenness. College
students who reported consuming alcohol mixed with energy drinks
also had significantly higher prevalence of alcohol-related consequences,
like sexual assault and injury.
In May, Attorney General Gansler announced that Anheuser-Busch
would stop producing alcoholic energy drinks, including Tilt and
Bud Extra. With the elimination of Sparks from the market, nearly
85% of all alcoholic energy drinks that were available at the start
of this year will be eliminated from the market.
See the agreement here.
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