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Dieters May Face Splenda Shortage

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  1. #1
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    Unhappy Dieters May Face Splenda Shortage

    By J.M. HIRSCH, Associated Press Writer

    Dieters hoping for a slew of new products with the sugar substitute Splenda may be disappointed next year.

    That's because the maker of sucralose, the key ingredient behind the increasingly ubiquitous no-calorie sweetener, is having trouble keeping up with demand.

    Tate & Lyle PLC, the world's only manufacturer of sucralose, said interest has so outpaced expectations the company won't take on new U.S. customers until it has doubled production at it's plant in McIntosh, Ala., sometime in early 2006.

    The company also plans to open a second plant in Singapore, according to a written statement.

    Buoyed by a surge in anti-sugar diets such as Atkins and South Beach, Splenda has enjoyed sweet success since its introduction in 2000, appearing in everything from soda and ice cream to candy and jams.


    Splenda, which won fans with its sugar-like sweetness and stability in baking, now dominates the $337 million U.S. retail market for sugar substitutes, beating out aspartame sweetener Equal, made by Chicago-based Merisant Corp.

    "Sucralose has one of those problems that's both good and bad to have," said John Sicher, editor of Beverage Digest. "The demand is tremendous. The supply is constrained."

    Splenda is sold to consumers as a table and baking sugar substitute by McNeil Nutritionals LLC, a Pennsylvania-based unit of Johnson & Johnson. Consumer sales won't be affected by the tight supply, a company spokeswoman said.

    Sales of sucralose to manufacturers as an ingredient for use in other products are handled directly by Tate & Lyle, which is headquartered in London.

    How many new sucralose-sweetened products will come to market is difficult to tell, says Sicher. It depends largely on how many products already have been developed and how much sucralose companies bought in advance.

    He says it's too soon to tell how the tight supply might affect existing sucralose-based products at large companies, such as Coca-Cola Co.'s low-calorie "C2" cola, but Tate & Lyle said the Alabama plant will meet the needs of existing customers.

    A Coke spokeswoman wouldn't comment.

    Small companies hoping to expand or introduce low-cal products likely will face the most trouble.

    Atkins Nutritionals helped spur Splenda's surge by endorsing its use in the company's hugely popular low-carb diet. Matthew Wiant, chief marketing officer for Atkins, estimates sucralose is used in as many as 10,000 products. But he doesn't think companies will have a problem switching to other sweeteners if they can't get it.

    Lyn Nabors of the Calorie Control Council, a nonprofit trade group, said more companies probably will switch to sugar and sweetener blends, which have fewer calories but require less of the substitute.

    Companies who insist on pure sucralose may have to delay new products, she said.

    Dan Conner, a co-owner of Conner Bottle Works, a small Newfields, N.H., company that makes old-fashioned glass-bottled sodas, started feeling the Splenda squeeze two months ago. That's when he got a letter from Tate & Lyle telling him he could buy only small amounts of sucralose each month.

    He said that for many years his company resisted making diet sodas because the available sugar substitutes didn't taste right. But sucralose was different, and this year Conner added two diet sodas.

    But with supplies tightening, Conner now hopes another company will introduce a sucralose competitor, since the cost of sucralose has jumped significantly.

    "Maybe we'll get some price wars going to help people like myself," he said.

    Merisant, which acquired the Equal business from Monsanto Co. in 2000, recently sued McNeil Nutritionals, accusing it of false advertising by claiming Splenda is made from sugar.

    McNeil Nutritionals claims the lawsuit is without merit, saying sucralose starts as cane sugar.

  2. #2
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    O M G A shortage of splenda??? Darn, splendas like one of my best friends

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    Damn It Jill....Only 4 packets per meal!
    "When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on."


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    good, splenda causes cancer anyway

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    Quote Originally Posted by myCATpowerlifts
    good, splenda causes cancer anyway
    Doesn't everything

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    welcome to stevia!

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    I don't think I have ever seen stevia. Jill...don't eat all the splenda.
    "When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on."


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    JLB- are you just kiddin? or you serious?

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    I'll stick to regular sugar. The only sugar i add is to my coffee. i don't add it to any other meal, and i don't eat any deserts or pastries... well not regularly, anyway.
    Last edited by BulkMeUp; 12-06-2004 at 08:33 AM.

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    I just bought a fresh 700 packet box yesterday.

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    Quote Originally Posted by sara
    JLB- are you just kiddin? or you serious?
    I'm serious, I've never seen it.
    "When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on."


  12. #12
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    They sell stevia at GNC...it is a sweet root that can be used as a sugar substitute. It comes in powder just like splenda but costs a heck of alot more. But it probably is safer to use.

    My mom used to give me strawberries dipped in stevia as a snack when I was a kid...those are good stuff!

    Jodie...I'll get some if you want to try it...let me know!
    My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.

    When one door closes another door opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the ones which open for us.

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    You can always count on Ebay.
    Someone somewhere will have 700 tons of splenda they need to get rid of

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    Quote Originally Posted by BoneCrusher
    You can always count on Ebay.
    Someone somewhere will have 700 tons of splenda they need to get rid of
    Holy crap, most "But it now" prices for 700 packets are $17 and up. I paid $13 at BJ's Wholesale Club. I should buy them all from BJ's for $13, then sell them for $16 on Ebay. I'll make millions! BWAAAHAHAHAHA!

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    Splenda is a British invention? Go England! Right, thats Television, fish & chips, the English language and a no calorie sugar subsitute we have given the world.

    Damn, we are good.
    Last edited by Woody_London; 12-07-2004 at 09:27 AM.

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by myCATpowerlifts
    good, splenda causes cancer anyway
    How so?
    Banish bad eating days forever!
    Make every day a good eating day

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    Quote Originally Posted by klmclean
    How so?
    I think it was proven in test labs that mice who consumed 475 lbs of Splenda every day for 62 years eventually developed thyroid cancer.

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    Quote Originally Posted by I Are Baboon
    I think it was proven in test labs that mice who consumed 475 lbs of Splenda every day for 62 years eventually developed thyroid cancer.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jill
    O M G A shortage of splenda??? Darn, splendas like one of my best friends
    No kidding, my food won't be the same without it...better buy a truckload just in case

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    Quote Originally Posted by I Are Baboon
    I think it was proven in test labs that mice who consumed 475 lbs of Splenda every day for 62 years eventually developed thyroid cancer.
    smart ass

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    Quote Originally Posted by Woody_London
    Splenda is a British invention? Go England! Right, thats Television, fish & chips, the English language and a no calorie sugar subsitute we have given the world.

    Damn, we are good.
    You're forgetting about that Beckham character..oh and the Spice Girls.

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    Quote Originally Posted by iMan323
    By J.M. HIRSCH, Associated Press Writer

    Dieters hoping for a slew of new products with the sugar substitute Splenda may be disappointed next year.

    That's because the maker of sucralose, the key ingredient behind the increasingly ubiquitous no-calorie sweetener, is having trouble keeping up with demand.

    Tate & Lyle PLC, the world's only manufacturer of sucralose, said interest has so outpaced expectations the company won't take on new U.S. customers until it has doubled production at it's plant in McIntosh, Ala., sometime in early 2006.

    The company also plans to open a second plant in Singapore, according to a written statement.

    Buoyed by a surge in anti-sugar diets such as Atkins and South Beach, Splenda has enjoyed sweet success since its introduction in 2000, appearing in everything from soda and ice cream to candy and jams.


    Splenda, which won fans with its sugar-like sweetness and stability in baking, now dominates the $337 million U.S. retail market for sugar substitutes, beating out aspartame sweetener Equal, made by Chicago-based Merisant Corp.

    "Sucralose has one of those problems that's both good and bad to have," said John Sicher, editor of Beverage Digest. "The demand is tremendous. The supply is constrained."

    Splenda is sold to consumers as a table and baking sugar substitute by McNeil Nutritionals LLC, a Pennsylvania-based unit of Johnson & Johnson. Consumer sales won't be affected by the tight supply, a company spokeswoman said.

    Sales of sucralose to manufacturers as an ingredient for use in other products are handled directly by Tate & Lyle, which is headquartered in London.

    How many new sucralose-sweetened products will come to market is difficult to tell, says Sicher. It depends largely on how many products already have been developed and how much sucralose companies bought in advance.

    He says it's too soon to tell how the tight supply might affect existing sucralose-based products at large companies, such as Coca-Cola Co.'s low-calorie "C2" cola, but Tate & Lyle said the Alabama plant will meet the needs of existing customers.

    A Coke spokeswoman wouldn't comment.

    Small companies hoping to expand or introduce low-cal products likely will face the most trouble.

    Atkins Nutritionals helped spur Splenda's surge by endorsing its use in the company's hugely popular low-carb diet. Matthew Wiant, chief marketing officer for Atkins, estimates sucralose is used in as many as 10,000 products. But he doesn't think companies will have a problem switching to other sweeteners if they can't get it.

    Lyn Nabors of the Calorie Control Council, a nonprofit trade group, said more companies probably will switch to sugar and sweetener blends, which have fewer calories but require less of the substitute.

    Companies who insist on pure sucralose may have to delay new products, she said.

    Dan Conner, a co-owner of Conner Bottle Works, a small Newfields, N.H., company that makes old-fashioned glass-bottled sodas, started feeling the Splenda squeeze two months ago. That's when he got a letter from Tate & Lyle telling him he could buy only small amounts of sucralose each month.

    He said that for many years his company resisted making diet sodas because the available sugar substitutes didn't taste right. But sucralose was different, and this year Conner added two diet sodas.

    But with supplies tightening, Conner now hopes another company will introduce a sucralose competitor, since the cost of sucralose has jumped significantly.

    "Maybe we'll get some price wars going to help people like myself," he said.

    Merisant, which acquired the Equal business from Monsanto Co. in 2000, recently sued McNeil Nutritionals, accusing it of false advertising by claiming Splenda is made from sugar.

    McNeil Nutritionals claims the lawsuit is without merit, saying sucralose starts as cane sugar.
    WHEW!!! I was actually worried there for a sec., good thing i re-read the post.

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    Quote Originally Posted by iMan323
    You're forgetting about that Beckham character..oh and the Spice Girls.
    See, we are the country that just keeps on giving. Shame you didn't want to keep the Spice Girls. They all have solo carrers over here now.

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