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Soft drink size limit protest sign placed on a delivery truck by New York's Pepsi bottler. The sugary drinks portion cap rule, [1] [2] also known as the soda ban, [2] was a proposed limit on soft drink size in New York City intended to prohibit the sale of many sweetened drinks more than 16 fluid ounces (0.47 liters) in volume to have taken effect on March 12, 2013. [3]
Campa Cola is a soft drink brand in India.It was a market leader in the Indian soft drink market in the 1970s and 1980s in most regions of India until the advent of the foreign players Pepsi and Coca-Cola after the liberalisation policy of the P. V. Narasimha Rao government in 1991.
As soda sales fall, Coke and Pepsi are looking to bottled water to boost business. Bottled water sales have more than doubled in the US in the last 15 years, with Americans buying 11.7 billion ...
Apart from carbonated soft drinks of PepsiCo such as Pepsi, 7 Up, Mountain Dew and Mirinda, the company distributes Tropicana and Tropicana Slice fruit juice brands, Gatorade sports-themed beverages, Sting energy drinks, Creambell milkshakes, Duke's club soda, Lipton ready-to-drink ice tea, and Aquafina brand of bottled water.
According to Business Insider, data released by Beverage Digest reveals that Pepsi has beaten out Diet Coke as the second-biggest soda brand in the U.S. for the year 2014. Not by a whole lot, though.
The recommended daily amount of drinking water for humans varies. [1] It depends on activity, age, health, and environment.In the United States, the Adequate Intake for total water, based on median intakes, is 4.0 litres (141 imp fl oz; 135 US fl oz) per day for males older than 18, and 3.0 litres (106 imp fl oz; 101 US fl oz) per day for females over 18; it assumes about 80% from drink and 20 ...
Coca-Cola (KO) and PepsiCo (PEP) would prefer if you stopped reading this article right now. After all, the world's two most popular soft drink companies can't be happy that more and more ...
Coca-Cola and Pepsi vending machines in Indianapolis, 1988. The Cola wars are the long-time rivalry between soft drink producers The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo, who have engaged in mutually-targeted marketing campaigns for the direct competition between each company's product lines, especially their flagship colas, Coca-Cola and Pepsi.