FOODANDDRINKEUROPE.com - 20/03/2007
According to press reports, Coca-Cola's Beverage Partners
Worldwide division has trademarked the name 'Lumaé' for a
product that will contain ingredients that can help women care
for their skin.
Coca-Cola's spokespeople are coy about the development. But an
unidentified source told Brandweek that the product, tipped to
emerge from BPW's pipeline in 2008, that the product will be
sold in department stores rather than mass-market retail outlets
where Coca-Cola's offerings are more commonly found, such as
7-Eleven.
It will be aimed at "active, influential, image-conscious
women over the age of 25, who embrace health and wellness".
The rumours come on the back of Danone's introduction of its
Essensis yoghurt, said to nourish the skin from the inside, last
month. As with Lumae, the development of Essensis was leaked to
the media ahead of the launch and was the subject of much
speculation.
In the past multinationals have seized upon other product
development areas that started out as the preserve of small-time
players, and built them up to be strong categories within the
mainstream food industry.
For instance, many organic brands started out as small
businesses that were snapped up by bigger companies when they
reached an attractive stage of development - or the big boys
have made their own way into the new area, their path smoothed
by huge R&D and marketing budgets.
The same pattern may be emerging for beauty foods. A company
called Borba Skin balance claims to have pioneered the skin care
beverages market - at least in the US - with a range of waters
that have been sold in department stores since 2005.
Beauty foods are still too new for analysts to have put a figure
on market value. But Leatherhead Food International, which calls
ingestible ingredients with skin benefits 'skingestibles',
hosted one-day conference in London in November to discuss
market drivers and opportunities for food companies eyeing this
market, such as catering to consumers' self-esteem issues.
As for Coca-Cola, it has been eager for some time to build up a
reputation for healthier products instead of just sugar-laden
fizzy drinks. It is said to be preparing for the launch of Diet
Coke Plus, fortified with vitamins and minerals. Under its
Minute Maid brand (which also boasts a heart health juice with
plant sterols), the beverage giant has just launched a joint
health drink containing Cargill's Regenasure non-animal derived
glucosamine, which recently obtained GRAS (generally recognised
as safe) status in the US.
Coca-Cola's BPW division is a joint venture with Nestlé, and the
route through which the two companies launched their Enviga
green tea based drink, claimed to aid weight management by
burning calories.
Enviga has been the subject of controversy, however,
particularly since the Center for Science in the Public Interest
initiated a lawsuit challenging the scientific basis for its
claims. The product was also named as one to watch in connection
with the US Food and Drug Administration's consultation last
year into whether more stringent regulation on functional foods
and drinks is required in the American market.
Since Nestlé is a major shareholder in French beauty giant
L'Oréal, it is no great surprise that Lumaé looks set to emerge
from the BPW joint venture channel.
Jess Halliday
www.foodanddrinkeurope.com