
What to know about soda sweeteners as sugar returns to American Coke
For decades, Coke and the makers of other soft drinks have generally used high fructose corn syrup or artificial sweeteners in their products manufactured in the U.S. But American consumers are increasingly looking for food and drinks with fewer and
more natural ingredients
, and beverage companies are responding.
PepsiCo
and
Dr Pepper
have sold versions of their flagship sodas sweetened with cane sugar since 2009. Coca-Cola has
sold Mexican Coke
— which uses cane sugar — in the U.S. since 2005, but it's positioned a trendy alternative and sold in glass bottles. Coke with cane sugar will likely be more widely available.
Here are some frequently asked questions about the sweeteners in U.S. sodas:
What's the difference between cane sugar and high fructose corn syrup?
Many consumers know that consuming too many sweets can negatively affect their health, but soda drinkers sometimes debate if either cane sugar or high fructose corn syrup is better (or worse) than the other.
The short answer is that it doesn't make a difference, said Marion Nestle, one of the nation's top nutrition experts and professor emeritus at New York University.
High fructose corn syrup is made of the simple sugars glucose and fructose in liquid form. Cane sugar, also known as sucrose, is made of glucose and fructose bonded, but quickly split, Nestle explained.
Both are still sugars, with about the same amount of calories.
Whether a can of Coca-Cola contains one or the other, it will still be a sugary drink with about the same amount of calories and the same potential to increase well-documented health problems from obesity and diabetes to tooth decay.
Why did soda companies switch from using sugar to high fructose corn syrup?
High fructose corn syrup costs less. According to price data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the wholesale price of HFCS-55, the type of corn syrup most commonly used in beverages, averaged 49.4 cents per pound last year. The average wholesale price of refined cane sugar was 60.1 cents per pound, while the average wholesale price of refined beet sugar was 51.7 cents per pound.
But high fructose corn syrup has advantages beyond price. According to a 2008 paper in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, high fructose corn syrup is more stable than sugar when added to acidic beverages, and it can be pumped directly from delivery trucks into storage and mixing tanks.
Why is high fructose corn syrup less expensive that sugar?
Tariffs are one reason. The U.S. has had barriers on sugar imports almost back to its founding; the first went into place in 1789, according to the Cato Institute, a think tank that advocates free markets.
Since the passage of the Farm Bill in 1981, the U.S. has had a system in place that raises duties on sugar once a certain amount has been imported. The U.S. also has domestic production controls that limit supplies, keeping prices higher.
But high fructose corn syrup is also cheaper because of the federal government's billions of dollars in subsidies for corn farmers. Loans, direct payments, insurance premium subsidies and surplus crop purchases all lower farmers' costs – and the price of the corn they grow.
Are sugar replacements used in diet sodas safe?
While cutting back on added sugars has documented benefits, replacing them with artificial sweeteners is complicated, too.
Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, introduced in 2017, uses the
artificial sweetener aspartame
and the natural sweetener stevia in its recipe.
But research suggests that aspartame may be linked to cancer. In 2023, a committee for the World Health Organization determined that aspartame should be categorized 'as possibly carcinogenic to humans.'
While that doesn't mean that diet soda causes cancer, the scientific committee concluded that there may be a possible link between aspartame and liver cancer, and that the issue should be studied further.
The U.S. Food and Drug administration disagreed with the WHO panel, citing 'significant shortcomings' in the research that backed the conclusion.
FDA officials noted that aspartame is one of the most studied food additives and said 'FDA scientists do not have safety concerns' when it is used under approved conditions.
Stevia, a plant-based sweetener, appears to be 'a safe choice,' according to the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group.
___
Durbin reported from Detroit. Aleccia reported from Los Angeles.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
3 minutes ago
- Axios
Vaccine opt-outs rise again among Arkansas kids
The rate of nonmedical exemptions for vaccines among Arkansas kindergartners saw a slight uptick in the 2024-25 school year, according to newly released data from the CDC. The big picture: Vaccination coverage among American kindergartners decreased for all reported vaccines during the 2024-2025 school year. The drop coincides with measles cases hitting a 33-year high in the U.S., while Trump's Health Department secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., upends longstanding vaccine norms. By the numbers: About 3.5% of kindergartners in Arkansas had nonmedical exemptions for vaccines in the 2024-25 school year, up from 3.4% the year before. The rate has continuously been trending upward. Just 1.2% of Arkansas kindergartners had a nonmedical exemption in the 2014-15 school year, according to the CDC. Medical exemptions in the state have held steady at about 0.1%, meaning 99.9% of children do not have a medical reason for not getting vaccinated. Threat level: Roughly 92-94% of the population needs to be vaccinated against measles to avoid community spread, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Thursday briefing: Trump's tariffs; Fort Stewart shooting; Alzheimer's study; making potatoes healthy; and more
President Donald Trump's new tariffs for dozens of countries took effect overnight. Tulsi Gabbard overrode CIA officials' concerns in a push to release a classified report. The U.S. plans to scale back its human rights criticisms of certain countries. Five soldiers were shot at Fort Stewart Army base in Georgia. Scientists found a potential key to reversing Alzheimer's disease.


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Potatoes are healthy, but french fries? Not so much, new study suggests.
They're the most popular vegetable in the United States, where people eat an average of nearly 50 pounds of them a year, according to the U.S. Agriculture Department's most recent food availability data. But the humble potato doesn't always get the nutritional respect of say, Brussels sprouts. 'Potatoes have long been associated with poor health despite being basically healthy foods,' said Marion Nestle, a molecular biologist and Paulette Goddard professor of nutrition, food studies and public health, emerita, at New York University.