Chocolate Bars Could Shrink Even More To Tackle Growing Obesity Crisis

Your Favourite Chocolate Bars Are Destined To Get Even Smaller
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Chocolate bars could soon become smaller in a bid to combat the growing obesity crisis.

Manufacturers Mars, Nestlé and Mondelez could be set to shrink their chocolate bars by up to 20% to avoid being named and shamed in Public Health England’s (PHE) reports on childhood obesity, The Times reported. 

Today nearly a third of children aged two to 15 are overweight or obese.

The health problem doubles the risk of dying prematurely, according to PHE, which means tackling the issue will inevitably save lives. 

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Bloomberg via Getty Images

As part of the government’s action plan on tackling childhood obesity, the health body said it would launch a sugar reduction programme to remove sugar from the products children eat most - with a view to taking out 20% of sugar in these products over the next four years.

“Evidence shows that slowly changing the balance of ingredients in everyday products, or making changes to product size, is a successful way of improving diets,” reads the plan. 

“All sectors of the food and drinks industry will be challenged to reduce overall sugar across a range of products that contribute to children’s sugar intakes by at least 20% by 2020, including a 5% reduction in year one.

“This can be achieved through reduction of sugar levels in products, reducing portion size or shifting purchasing towards lower sugar alternatives.”

It is not yet clear whether manufacturers will reduce prices to coincide with their products shrinking in size.

The decision to reduce bar sizes - rather than reformulate recipes - comes after some manufacturers said they couldn’t replace sugar with artificial sweeteners, as it changes the taste and can result in a laxative effect.

Dr Alison Tedstone, chief nutritionist at PHE, said: “Parents want help to make healthier food choices and for their children to eat less sugar.

“We’re supporting all sectors of the food and drink industry to lower how much sugar children get from everyday products, either through reformulation, portion sizes or encouraging parents to buy products with less sugar in them.”

A Nestlé spokesperson told The Huffington Post UK that it would consider recipe reformulation in addition to re-sizing.

“While re-sizing is an effective way to reduce sugar, calories and fat from confectionery, it is certainly not the only choice,” they said.

“Recipe reformulation, ingredient substitution and the use of new technologies are all possibilities and with the right investment behind them, could deliver significant reductions.

“Nestlé is in the process of looking at all options and we are keeping in close contact with PHE while they establish their sugar reduction programme”.

A spokesperson for Mondelez told HuffPost UK: “We have been an active partner in the consultation on the Childhood Obesity Plan and the sugar reduction targets and look forward to seeing the output of this in March.

“As a result of what is published we will consider all the options available to us as we look to continuing to play our role in tackling public health issues such as obesity. 

“Importantly, we have already been very active in this space including offering more portion control products, bringing all our single portion chocolate bars under 250kcal, and launching sugar-free offerings such as Halls and Trebor Mighties.”

Confectionery Changes That Ruined Our Lives
When Toblerone Changed Shape(01 of09)
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Instead of reducing the price of Toblerone, Mondelēz changed the shape of the bar to include bigger gaps between each triangle.

The manufacturer issued a statement on Facebook which said it had increased the gap between peaks on its bars so they could continue to offer customers “good value for money”, but the move was called "ridiculous" by disappointed fans.
(credit:Toblerone)
When Terry’s Chocolate Orange Shrank By 10%(02 of09)
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Earlier this year it emerged that Terry's Chocolate Orange manufacturer Mondelez International had taken the 175g chocolate and reduced it to 157g.

Despite the beloved treat being 10% smaller than it was a year ago, in many shops the price is still the same. Devastated.
(credit:JOHN GILESPA ARCHIVE)
When Toffee Deluxe Was Removed From Quality Street(03 of09)
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For some people, the Toffee Deluxe was a chocolate to be fought over at Christmas time. But not anymore.

Nestle removed the rectangular cocoa-covered toffee sweet from its boxes after 80 years and replaced it with a Honeycomb Crunch.
(credit:JOY SKIPPER VIA GETTY IMAGES)
When Cadbury Changed Its ‘Fruit & Nut’ Recipe(04 of09)
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Last year, Cadbury broke Fruit & Nut fans' hearts after it announced it would be changing the 90-year-old recipe by adding sultanas.

One person summed up all our reactions by saying: "Is nothing sacred?"
(credit:CADBURY)
When Galaxy Truffle Was Removed From Celebrations(05 of09)
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It was a move that prompted government petitions and angry Facebook pages, but sadly no amount of protesting could bring back the Galaxy Truffle after its controversial removal from the Celebrations tub. Sad times. (credit:PLAYBUZZ)
When Cadbury Scrapped Its Time Out Bar And Swapped It For A Wafer(06 of09)
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Remember Time Out bars? They lightened up many a dreary morning/afternoon/evening.

But then one day Cadbury decided to remove the chocolate bar from supermarket shelves and replace it with a low-calorie wafer. We're not bitter. Not at all.
(credit:CADBURY)
When Crunchies And Dreams Were Removed From Cadbury Heroes(07 of09)
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In a controversial move back in 2008, Dreams and Crunchies were dropped from Cadbury Heroes tubs and replaced with Bournvilles and toffee Eclairs.

Very clearly not the stuff of dreams.
(credit:LEON NEAL via Getty Images)
When Cadbury Secretly Changed Its Creme Egg Recipe(08 of09)
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Chocolate lovers were left outraged after it emerged that Cadbury had “secretly” changed its Creme Egg recipe in 2015. The sticky white and yellow centre had been kept the same, but the company had swapped the traditional Cadbury Dairy Milk chocolate shell to a “standard cocoa mix”. (credit:Anthony Devlin/PA Archive)
When Opal Fruits Became Starburst(09 of09)
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Opal Fruits were renamed Starburst in 1998 by manufacturer Mars - much to fans' disgust. Admittedly Starburst have now become a household name and many of us have probably forgotten about Opal Fruits. But still, it was traumatic at the time, people. (credit:PA/PA Archive)