Mondelez, PepsiCo among companies dominating junk-food advertising before 9pm watershed, study says

Just Food · Haribo Facebook page

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A handful of global confectionery and snacks giants, including Mondelez International and PepsiCo, have been pulled up for their record on TV advertising of unhealthy foods in the UK.

The two companies, along with Mars, Haribo and Kellanova, were identified as accounting for 80% of all the TV advertising of confectionery and snacks before the 9pm watershed, when children are likely to be viewing before bedtime.

London-based charity The Food Foundation, which campaigns for healthy diets, reported that those five manufacturers were among the 13 food and beverage companies advertising so-called HFSS products in the 5:30am to 9pm zone.

That is a time period when “children are more likely to watch TV”, the Foundation said in its annual State of the Nation’s Food Industry report for 2024, adding that Haribo and Mars were the biggest culprits among the five standouts – 25% and 20%, respectively, in terms of the share of adverts concerned.

The data was provided by the University of Liverpool but was based on an analysis from July to August 2022. That preceded the change of government in the UK, although Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has pledged, among the party’s key mandates, to stamp out advertising of so-called junk foods.

During its reign, the Conservative Party had pushed back a ban on the advertising of junk, or unhealthy foods, before the watershed threshold to October 2025, as the cost-of-living crunch took hold.

Rules banning multi-buy deals on foods and drinks high in fat, salt, or sugar (HFSS), including buy-one-get-one-free deals, were also delayed until that time.

It did, however, implement a ban on displays of unhealthy foods at retailer checkouts and end-of-aisle promotions in 2023 amid a general push in the UK to cut obesity rates, particularly in children.

Labour has said it will honour those October 2025 commitments.

Rebecca Tobi, the senior business and investor engagement manager at The Food Foundation, urged the Labour government to take up the baton.

“If we are to have any chance of ensuring the next generation are the healthiest ever – as Labour have pledged – then we simply can’t continue to ignore the major role large food companies are playing in shaping UK diets.

"We urgently need the government to introduce regulation to raise standards and create a level playing field that enables progressive businesses to go further, faster.”

The Food Foundation suggested the five confectionery and snacks companies pulled up in the report have marketing policies not to advertise products to children but claimed those same policies were not being honoured.