PepsiCo Goes Natural: Is This The End of Artificial Colors in Food?
PepsiCo says it plans to replace artificial colors with natural ones across its product lines by 2026, but the move could come with major R&D and consumer acceptance challenges. The Fast Five crew debates whether regulation is the only real way to force change.
0:02 – PepsiCo CEO outlines natural color transition timeline
0:45 – U.S. HHS pushes voluntary color removal by 2026
2:00 – France vs U.S.: stark differences in food color standards
3:40 – Why reformulation is hard: R&D, sourcing, pricing
4:45 – The food-as-medicine opportunity
6:00 – Will Americans accept the change without regulation?
7:00 – Red Vines, Trix, and the real struggle of visual food culture
For the full episode, head here: https://youtu.be/LpW3lI-L7TI
This week's episode is brought to you by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Simbe, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, and ClearDemand.
#pepsico #naturalingredients #CPGInnovation #FoodReformulation #HealthierSnacks #cleanlabel #doritos #RedVines #foodregulations #RetailPodcast
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00:00 - Untitled
00:00 - PepsiCo's Transition to Natural Ingredients
01:20 - Challenges of Replacing Artificial Colors in Food
03:49 - Navigating Regulatory Challenges in Supply Chains
06:16 - Consumer Trends and Regulatory Impact on Food Quality
07:36 - Consumer Trends and Snacking Habits
PepsiCo CEO says that it is, quote, accelerating its transition to natural ingredients, according to Food Dive.
Speaker APepsiCo CEO said during PepsiCo's first quarter earnings call with analysts on Thursday that the Cheetos and Doritos maker My Favorite and Doritos plans to have transitioned, quote, all the portfolio into natural colors or at least provide the consumer with natural color options end quote in the next, quote, cold couple years, end quote.
Speaker AThe comments came two days after Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F.
Speaker AKennedy Jr.
Speaker AAnnounced the Department wants food companies to voluntarily remove or replace commonly used synthetic colors before the end of 2026.
Speaker AHowever, replacing synthetic colors with natural ones and and friends is not easy.
Speaker AIt can be hard to find a suitable replacement and consumers sometimes don't like the new color.
Speaker ADon't take my Doritos.
Speaker APepsiCo case in point in 20 in General Mills changed several cereals, including Trix, as part of its pledge to remove artificial colors and flavors.
Speaker AI just started thinking about the Liam Neeson when he wants to buy tricks in one of the tech movies.
Speaker AFine consumer complaints and a decline in sales.
Speaker AGeneral Mills brought back tricks with artificial colors a year later.
Speaker AI guess tricks just aren't for kids.
Speaker ALouise how should food companies be preparing to voluntarily remove or replace artificial colors before 2027?
Speaker AIs this timeline also even realistic?
Speaker AThis feels like it' your wheelhouse.
Speaker BI love the the voluntarily.
Speaker BI mean maybe it's an American thing and companies love to voluntarily comply with with new regulation.
Speaker BBut, but that's, that's going to be a big question because as you said, it's, it's not easy to do.
Speaker BSo as long as it's voluntary, I'm not sure you'll see a lot of people raise their hands and do it first.
Speaker BBut you mentioned, and rightfully so, that you know, the colors aren't going to be the same, the brightness isn't going to be the same and you need to educate the consumer.
Speaker BThat's going to be a big change.
Speaker BAnd if you look at shelves in France where I'm from versus shelves in the US it's actually pretty different.
Speaker BThe colors are just less vibrant in France because all of those artificial colorings are most of them are banned already.
Speaker BSo how quickly will the US Consumer adapt to to the new offering?
Speaker BThat's a question mark from the R D perspective.
Speaker BYou know, how do you actually replace, reformulate, validate your your new formulas with with natural colorings?
Speaker BThat's going to be quite tricky.
Speaker BAnd the timeline doesn't seem, you know, 2026, end of 2026 we're already in 2026 when you're, you're thinking cor now from a planning standpoint.
Speaker BSo that seems extremely short from an R and D standpoint.
Speaker BAnd finally, third is how do you get the relevant supply base?
Speaker BSo a lot of, a lot of your suppliers who work in Europe, they already have a supply chain that can have your natural coloring, but you need to bring it to the US the volumes are going to change, so it puts pressure.
Speaker BThe prices are going to change.
Speaker BSo are the consumers going to want to buy for more expensive, something that looks less good from the American standards?
Speaker BGoing to be a big question mark as well.
Speaker BSo we'll see how it plays out.
Speaker BIf it's voluntary, not sure that will work.
Speaker BIf it's forced by, by the regulator, you don't really have a choice.
Speaker BSo that might make things work faster.
Speaker AYeah, it's a question of how long you can breathe for, you know, how much time they give you to breathe.
Speaker ABut eventually, eventually you have to think that some type of regulation is coming in this vein, which is, you know, for me, I think about it, I step back and I say, okay, there's a problem side and then with every problem, there's an opportunity on the problem side is you got to get ready for the regulation.
Speaker ASo you have to start trying to do this.
Speaker ALike the point I made in the last headline too.
Speaker AYou got to put your product roadmap out.
Speaker AYou got to lay it out in front of you and you got to put a plan in place product by product and see what you can do on the timeline.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut it's not the time to breathe easy.
Speaker AWe heard the same thing with regards to Fisma from Angela Fernandez of GS1US earlier this weekend.
Speaker ARemember that where she said in relation to that timeline, moving out, that regulation, moving out, you still have to do the work and get it done.
Speaker AIt's not a time to relax.
Speaker ABut the opportunity side to Luis, I'm curious about this is with all.
Speaker AWith this trend happening, I think from a product development side, it tells the CPG companies that they need to lever up on the idea of food is medicine, continue to develop products in that vein, to take advantage of where the trend is going overall.
Speaker AFrom a consumer perspective, how do you think about the new product development in relation to this headline?
Speaker BYeah, for sure.
Speaker BHaving healthier food and communicating on it and finding new consumer pockets who are inclined to pay more for healthier and better products.
Speaker BYes, but in the current environment, with high inflationary, inflationary pressures, you're actually going the Opposite direction, where a lot of consumers are foregoing more sustainable and healthier products for cheaper products, which often focus less on health or sustainable aspects.
Speaker BSo it's a little bit of a tricky place for smaller CPGs that are already focused on the premium market.
Speaker BYeah, they're there.
Speaker BThey can have natural coloring, more sustainable products for the more mass market.
Speaker BThe winners are going to be the ones that are able to comply with regulation with the best price, which means they'll have done a lot of work on their supply chain and negotiated the best deals and found the best suppliers.
Speaker ASo, yeah, you're right.
Speaker AThere's a lot of conflicting forces at play here.
Speaker AAnd what's your take here?
Speaker AWhat's coming to mind for you?
Speaker CI am just.
Speaker CThis is one of those times where you're like, oh my God, Americans were so embarrassing that we have to.
Speaker CWe, the General Mills went back to artificially flavored tricks like we.
Speaker CSo to, in my mind, it's like, unless there is a regulation, nothing's going to change.
Speaker CLike, we need the regulation, I think, to shift American consumer understanding of like getting those good quality ingredients versus artificial ingredients in our food.
Speaker COtherwise this is never going to happen.
Speaker CLike, I had a friend who used to work for Kraft.
Speaker CShe was a food scientist for Kraft and her job for three years was just trying to figure out how to make Kraft macaroni and cheese that wasn't bright orange and still tasted the same.
Speaker CAnd it was like the holy grail for.
Speaker CI mean, she, she probably is still working on it to this day.
Speaker CAnd I think, again, like, until this becomes something that we have to do and American consumers understand is like, this is where products are going.
Speaker CWe're going the way of Europe where we just don't have artificial flavorings and colors in our food anymore.
Speaker CLike, it's never going to work because we're just so accustomed.
Speaker BEurope and Canada and yeah, by the.
Speaker CWay, almost every other nation except for the U.S.
Speaker Cright.
Speaker CLike, yeah, lots of people are seeing the light here.
Speaker CAnd I think it's going to take that regulation before the American consumer gets on board.
Speaker AShout out to all our Canadian listeners up north.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd to Lisa's point and too, you got to get.
Speaker AAnd what can Americans afford to that 99 cent box of Kraft Mac macaroni and cheese is pretty attractive to a lot of consumers.
Speaker AJeff, what's the last word here?
Speaker ALast word.
Speaker AI agree that it's coming and it will happen, but I hope they can make my Red Vines as red as they.
Speaker BAs red as I like them.
Speaker COh, your red Vines are in big trouble.
Speaker CJeff, you and Chris, both.
Speaker CYou guys better stock up.
Speaker AI had eight of them yesterday, believe it or not, Jeff.
Speaker ALiterally, I had eight.
Speaker AEight of them yesterday.
Speaker AI'm, like, on an eight a day binge right now.
Speaker AI'm so into Red Vines right now, it's crazy.
Speaker ADiabetes, here we come.





