Current location:home page > Food Technology

Quality Street downsizing does not signal mass confectionery shrinking

“This is not kick-starting in any way a reduction product sizes,” a Nestlé spokesperson told Confect…
“This is not kick-starting in any way a reduction product sizes,” a Nestlé spokesperson told ConfectioneryNews.com.

Nestlé had come under criticism from consumer watchdogs such as Which? for reducing the weight of 1 Kg Quality Street tins to 820g, as many retailers have kept the same price ahead of the Christmas period.

In line with competitors

Our sister publication The Grocer broke news of the 18% reduction last week and it has since been picked up by UK national papers.

Nestlé said in a statement that the decision was taken in response to actions by competitors.

“We are now bringing our standard Quality Street tin in line with other tins of sweets which have reduced in size over the last few years,”
 said the firm.

Last year, Kraft-owned Cadbury cut Roses tins from 975g to 850g and Heroes from 950g to 800g.

Nestlé added that it had introduced a new larger 1.5kg tin of Quality Street for big families.

Pressure from commodity costs?

Confectioners in Europe have come under increasing pressure from volatile commodity costs.

Industry trade associations such as The Association of the Chocolate, Biscuit and Confectionery of Europe (CAOBISCO) have said that EU sugar quotas have constrained the European sugar supply putting confectioners under threat.
Nestlé head of procurement Tim Innocent also told a UK House of Lords Select Committee last month that his company would be under pressure until EU Common Agricultural Policy reforms deregulated the market. 

Related articles

PepsiCo bottle does not infringe Coke ‘Contour' trademarks – German court

The Hamburg Regional Court said – in a verdict delivered on May 31 in the case LG Hamburg 315 O 310/…

Ramona's Mexican Food to implement CDC Software’s application suite

Through the software implementation, Ramona's also seeks to improve efficiency, reduce costs, facili…

Puratos to construct Global R&D Centre

Puratos has begun the construction of a new Global R&D Centre has started at its headquarters in…

Country's 'plant clinics' aid farmers without chemicals

A room with a microscope, networked computer and drugs appears at first glance to be in a hospital.…

Canada and BC support apple and cherry grower's innovation

Projects introducing new technology to the province’s tree fruit industry are receiving support from…

Nanobionic spinach plants can detect explosives

Spinach is no longer just a superfood: By embedding leaves with carbon nanotubes, MIT engineers have…