The International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently rejected a global petition calling on them to end their longstanding sponsorship deal with Big Soda giant, Coca-Cola. The petition, launched during the 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games this past summer, as part of the global campaign “Kick Big Soda Out!”, garnered over 255,000 signatories from 95 countries (including the Caribbean) and the support of 93 partner organisations, including the Healthy Caribbean Coalition (HCC), Antigua and Barbuda Diabetes Association, EarthMedic and EarthNurse Foundation for Planetary Health, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Barbados, the Jamaica Youth Advocacy Network and Lake Health and Wellbeing St Kitts and Nevis.
The Power of Big Soda
The Olympic Games captured the attention of people across the globe. The 30.6 million average primetime viewership was 82% higher than the audience of the 2020 Tokyo Games – an incredible feat for the broadcast networks behind the Games. However, Olympic viewers were not just taking in the incredible achievements of athletes – viewers were also bombarded with overt and more surreptitious adverts for the Games’ longest standing partner: Coca-Cola – the largest soda company in the world.
The Olympic Games have been sponsored by this single beverage company since 1928 and their current contract extends until the 2032 Brisbane Games. The term ‘Big Soda’ refers to the global multimillion dollar soft drink industry giants. Sponsoring a large sporting event like the Olympics provides ‘Big Soda’ companies like Coca-Cola with unparalleled opportunities to market their products to enormous audiences, despite their negative impacts on viewers’ health and the environment. Additionally, sponsorship of sporting events allows companies to associate their products with historic moments and leading athletes. This practice, known as “sports washing,” gives unhealthy items like sugary drinks a misleading “health halo”, disguised as healthy while their overconsumption fuels the obesity and noncommunicable disease (NCD) crisis.
Many of these multinational soft drink companies make voluntary pledges not to market their products to children, but their actions tell a different story. They partner with elite sports that children watch, such as the Olympics and also sponsor local sporting activities. They run sports-related campaigns geared toward young people and use the same “sports washing” practices to reach youth at fitness and health-focused activities. Evidence has shown that young people may be especially susceptible to this type of marketing, which can increase their consumption of sugary drinks and other ultra-processed products.
Caribbean Impact
Today the Caribbean has some of the highest rates of adult obesity in the world and alarmingly, one in three children in the region is living with overweight or obesity and rates are steadily increasing – contributing to NCDs like Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Coca-Cola’s sponsorship of sport extends beyond the Olympic Games reaching deep into our local communities directly, and indirectly, through local subsidiaries. In resource-strained communities like the small developing states of the Caribbean, these players fill funding gaps in national sporting programs and events. The soda giant has sponsored local football clubs, national youth swimming, and athletics competitions in Barbados. Similarly, in The Bahamas, the local producer of Coca-Cola products, has a long history of sponsoring youth sport programs including swimming and football clubs. Across the region every year during the school sports terms, budding young elementary and secondary school athletes compete in national stadiums against a stark and contrasting backdrop of colorful banners promoting a range of unhealthy products from sugary sports drinks to popular fast foods. All of these arrangements present clear opportunities to promote unhealthy products to young people who both participate in and watch these events – reaching young, impressionable athletes through their love of sport and building lifelong brand loyalty.
Other popular beverage and fast-food companies have also employed these sports-washing practices, sponsoring school and community-based youth sporting events. In Jamaica, a popular fast food restaurant, reaffirmed its support for the 2024 Jumpball Basketball Programme with a JA$4.5 million donation. A sugary drink company partnered with a local school to refurbish its gymnasium as part of a commitment to the school’s sporting program. What was called, “…an investment in shaping the lives of their students,” is a chance to directly market sugar-filled beverages to children inside school walls.
Support for Ending Big Soda Sponsorship
There is growing acknowledgement of the commercial determinants of health – the actions of the private sector that positively and negatively influence health – and the need for comprehensive regulation of industries such as tobacco, alcohol fossil fuels and ultra-processed foods. This includes marketing regulation, which prevents these actors from deploying various advertising, sponsorship and promotions tactics, including through sport, to expand brand loyalty and increase consumption of their products.
Globally, opposition to Big Soda’s involvement in sport is growing. The “Kick Big Soda Out of Sport” highlighted sugary drinks’ impact on health and the environment. Through informing a global audience about Big Soda’s marketing tactics, the campaign aimed to end Big Soda’s sponsorship of sport. In addition to the quarter of a million signatories of support and almost 100 organisational supporters, The Lancet, one of the most powerful voices in global health, affirmed its support for the campaign stating, “…it [IOC] should drop its shortsighted and hypocritical partnerships with companies that enable great harm to health and wellbeing.” The HCC and many of our members joined the movement acknowledging that if action was not taken at the global level to manage the influence of conglomerates like Big Soda, it would further frustrate regional control and regulatory efforts.
Calling on the Governments to Regulate
The IOC’s rejection has only strengthened the resolve of the petition signatories, and follow up letters are being sent to the IOC underscoring that the Coca-Cola partnership ‘undermines [the IOCs] credibility and its mission to promote healthier lives through sport’ and reminding the IOC that ‘The Olympics should prioritize health, sustainability and integrity — not corporate interests.’
The HCC will continue to support the campaign globally and locally. The premise of the campaign aligns with regional health advocates’ call on CARICOM Governments for evidence-informed regulations of commercial actors and their unhealthy products, such as: front of package octagonal warning labelling on all pre-packaged foods; national school nutrition policies which restrict the availability and marketing (including sponsorship) of unhealthy products; implementation of framework convention on tobacco control (FCTC) and the WHO SAFER Technical package for alcohol control; and for clear guidelines to manage conflicts of interest and foster transparency in health promotion efforts and policymaking spaces.
The “Kick Big Soda Out” movement was an important catalyst for change. It’s time for innovative, health-promoting companies without conflicts of interest to step in and support healthier communities – displacing Big Soda and other health-harming companies. Tobacco, alcohol, fossil fuels and ultra-processed products like Big Soda have no place in sport.