Dasani
Type | Water beverage |
---|---|
Manufacturer | The Coca-Cola Company |
Country of origin | USA |
Introduced | 1999 |
Dasani /dəˈsaːni/ is a brand of bottled water from The Coca-Cola Company, launched in 1999,[1] after the success of Aquafina (produced by Coca-Cola-rival PepsiCo). It is one of many brands of Coca-Cola bottled water sold around the world. In 2010, in a bid to counteract falling sales and bans on bottled water, The Coca-Cola Company announced they would be distributing Dasani water in new packaging made of 30% plant based materials. Unlike other plant based packaging, the bottles are compatible with standard recycling plants and represent up to a 25% reduction in carbon emissions when compared to standard water bottles.[2]
Canada
Dasani was launched in all provinces of Canada except Quebec in 2000, a year after launching in the United States. The brand was made available in Quebec shortly afterwards, in April 2001.
There are five common Dasani bottle sizes sold in Canada: 330 mL, 500mL, 591 mL, 1 L, and 1.5 L. Bottles are sold individually and in packs of 6, 12, and 24.
The first source of Dasani water in Canada was Calgary, Alberta.[3] A second bottling plant was later opened in Brampton, Ontario. The Calgary and Brampton plants produce Coca-Cola's plain-water (Dasani) and sugar-water (soft drinks) products. The company's administrative and marketing activities continue to be based in Atlanta, Georgia.
Dasani has <35 ppm of total dissolved mineral salts .
In early 2005, two flavored versions of Dasani were introduced: Dasani With Lemon and Dasani With Raspberry. Dasani with Strawberry has since been introduced. The flavored beverages are sweetened with sucralose. Flavoured water enhancing drops are also now available in 3 flavors.
Latin America
Dasani was introduced to the Brazilian market in mid-2003, renamed as Aquarius. It was introduced to the Chilean market in 2005, including releases in regular, lemon and tangerine flavours. It was released in Colombia in late 2005 with their three regular flavors. In 2005, Dasani was introduced in the Argentinian market with the flavours peach, lemon, citrus and regular, being renamed to "Bon Aqua" in late-2012. It was also released under the name Ciel Dasani in Mexico in four flavors: lemon-cucumber, papaya-carrot, grapefruit and mandarin-green tea, but it was discontinued in 2006. It was also released in Peru, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay, Honduras and Suriname. In Venezuela, is sold under the name of Nevada, also available in flavors such as tangerine, grapefruit and Jamaican flower.
United Kingdom
Dasani was launched in the UK on 10 February 2004. The product launch was labelled "a disaster",[4] a "fiasco"[5] and a "PR catastrophe".[5]
Furthermore at launch the UK website redirected to the US website which displayed an animation containing tag lines such as "Can’t live without spunk" and "Bottled spunk". In the UK spunk is slang for semen.[6][7]
Prior to the launch, an article in The Grocer trade magazine had mentioned that the source of the Dasani brand water was in fact treated tap water from Sidcup, a suburban development in London. By early March 2004, the mainstream press had picked up the story[8] and it became widely reported that Sidcup tap water, after being processed by reverse osmosis, had been remineralized, bottled and sold under the Dasani brand name in the UK.[4] Although Coca-Cola never implied that the water was being sourced from a spring or other natural source, they marketed it as being especially "pure". This led the Food Standards Agency to request Hillingdon trading standards officers to launch an investigation into whether the claim was accurate.[9]
Richard May, Chief Publicity Officer of Dasani, was said to be disappointed that the water had not been more successful.
The media made mocking parallels with a 1992 episode of the well-known BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses, in which protagonist Del Boy attempts to pass off local tap water as bottled "Peckham Spring".[4] Del's scheme fails when he pollutes the local reservoir, causing the bottled water to glow yellow.
On 18 March 2004, UK authorities found a concentration of bromate, a suspected human carcinogen, in the product that could be considered harmful if consumed in large quantities. Coca-Cola immediately recalled half a million bottles and pulled the "Dasani" brand from the UK market.[10] Shortly after, plans to introduce the brand to Continental Europe were announced to have been cancelled as well. Bromate was not present in the water before Coca-Cola's treatment process. During that process the bromate was produced from the water's bromide.
Coca-Cola intended to launch Dasani in France and Germany, although this never went ahead after bad publicity in the United Kingdom.[11]
In line with the 2012 Summer Olympics and being the official drink sponsor, Coca-Cola decided not to reintroduce the Dasani brand to the UK market, and purchased the Morpeth-based Abbey Well bottler in 2008, branded under the Schweppes brand name (to which Coca-Cola holds the UK rights) to provide a locally-sourced water brand for the event. To meet Olympic branding regulations, Abbey Well water was labeled as "Still Water" for on-camera appearances during the Games.[12]
United States
Dasani uses tap water from local municipal water supplies,[13] filters it using the process of reverse osmosis,[13] and adds trace amounts of minerals, including magnesium sulfate (Epsom salt), potassium chloride and table salt (sodium chloride).
Regular Dasani water comes in the following sizes: 12 oz; 20 oz; 24 oz 'Sports Cap Bottle'; 1 L; 1.5 L; 300 mL; 12 oz fridge pack; 500 mL 6, 12, 24, and 32-pack; and the 24 oz 6-pack.
The Dasani brand includes flavored water, which uses the sweetener sucralose (sold under the Tate & Lyle brand name "Splenda"). The flavors are lemon, grape, raspberry, and strawberry. The flavored varieties are sold as 20 fluid ounce bottles, 500 ml 6-packs, and 12 oz 8-packs.
The new Plus+ product line is similar to the flavored variety, only differing in the fact that these have added vitamins and some different flavors Pomegranate-Blackberry, Orange-Tangerine, Kiwi-Strawberry, and Lemon-Lime flavors. Dasani Plus comes in a 12 oz bottle.
On September 7, 2012, Coke announced it was launching a liquid flavor enhancer called Dasani Drops.[14][15]
References and footnotes
- ↑ "Coke Enters North American Bottled Water Market With 'Dasani'". Beverageonline.com. 1999-02-22. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
- ↑ "CCan The PlantBottle Save The Bottled Water Industry?". Fast Company. 2004-03-19.
- ↑ "Coca-Cola pulls Dasani launch in Europe". CBC News. 2004-03-24.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Bill Garrett (2004-06-16). "Coke's water bomb". BBC News Online. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 McCarthy, Michael (2004-03-20). "Pure? Coke's attempt to sell tap water backfires in cancer scare". The Independent (London: Common Dreams NewsCenter). Archived from the original on 2004. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
- ↑ Ashlee Vance (2004-03-19). "Coke's spunky water pulled from UK market". The Register.
- ↑ Lester Haines (2004-03-11). "Introducing Dasani – the water with added, er, protein". The Register.
- ↑ Matthew Beard (2004-03-02). "The real thing? Coke's water comes straight from the tap with a cool mark-up of 3,000 per cent". The Independent (London). Retrieved 2008-06-21.
- ↑ Matthew Beard (2004-03-03). "Inquiry into Coke's tap water". The Independent (London). Retrieved 2008-06-21.
- ↑ "Coke recalls controversial water". BBC. 2004-03-19.
- ↑ "Coke shuts tap on Dasani in UK". CNN. 2004-03-25.
- ↑ "New logo: Schweppes Abbey Well". The Branding Source. 16 March 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 "Soft drink is purified tap water". BBC News. 1 March 2004.
- ↑ "MiO My! Coke Set to Launch Dasani Drops". BevNET. Retrieved September 7, 2012.
- ↑ "Coca-Cola will cannonball into the drink drops business". USA Today. 7 September 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2012.
External links
- Dasani.com – Official Website
- Dasani – Coca-ColaCompany.com
- "Coke Announces Dasani Water". Beverage Digest. February 1999.
- Coca-cola, Kellogg’s, Mattel and Takeda Pharmaceuticals top the list of international brands guilty of abusing consumer rights., an October 2007 article from Consumers International
- What's in that bottle?, a January 2003 article from Consumer Reports
- Is America's $8 Billion Bottled Water Industry a Fraud?, a December 2003 article by E/The Environmental Magazine
- Things get worse with Coke, an explanatory article from The Guardian newspaper.
- "Tap water wears a bow tie when it's put in a bottle and sold" News article about Dasani bottling plant operating during a drought
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