 
 

(NaturalNews) The Coca-Cola Company has announced the launch of 
a new project designed to devise ingredients for beverages from traditional 
Chinese medicines. Coca-Cola has established a permanent research center in 
Beijing, at the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences. Researchers from the 
company will work together with staff from the academy to analyze traditional 
Chinese medicines for potential nutritional benefits, then to figure out ways to 
incorporate these ingredients into beverage formulas.
The move comes as 
sales of carbonated beverages continue to decline in the United States and 
Europe as consumers seek healthier alternatives. According to Coca-Cola 
Enterprises (CCE), the Coca-Cola Company's primary North American and Western 
European bottler, CCE sales volume has decreased by 4 percent in North America 
and continues to face "great challenges" in the United Kingdom. Earnings per 
share fell nearly 10 percent in 2007.
Overall global revenues, however, 
increased by 5 percent in the first fiscal quarter. CCE attributed the rise to 
the strong sales of water, juice and sports drinks in North America and the sale 
of sugar-free Coke Zero in France and the Netherlands.
Researching 
Chinese medicine is not Coca-Cola's only tactic for averting falling profits and 
remaining the largest beverage company in the world. The company has also 
entered a tentative agreement with coffee company Illy to team up in the sale of 
ready-to-drink coffee products. The companies hope to have reached a formal 
agreement by the end of 2007.
"This partnership demonstrates our 
commitment to meeting evolving consumer demands while creating additional value 
for our system, our customers and our shareowners," said Coca-Cola Chief 
Operating Officer Muhtar Kent.
In the United Kingdom, Coke is trying new 
marketing strategies that include renaming sodas as "carbonated beverages." Thus 
far, these efforts have seen no apparent return.
"You can call it what 
you want," countered consumer health advocate Mike Adams, "but it's still sugar 
water." Adams is the author of The Five Soft Drink Monsters, a book that helps 
people overcome addiction to soda pop.
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