31.03.2026

Germany renews push for sugar tax and energy drinks ban for children

A German push to tax sugary drinks and ban energy drinks for under-16s ​will be voted on by the country’s assembly of regional states on Friday as public and ‌cross-party support emerges for tougher action on obesity and related illness.

The proposal seen by Reuters and going before the Bundesrat on Friday would kickstart the legislative process for such a move. It does not spell out how a levy should be designed, but it does ​propose that revenue raised should be used for health initiatives.

«Manufacturers should have an incentive to revise their ​recipes and reduce sugar content. So far they have had no such incentive», — said Daniel ⁠Guenther, state premier of Schleswig-Holstein and initiator of the legislative proposal.

The proposal also ​calls for a ban on the sale of energy drinks to children under 16 because of the high caffeine, taurine ​and sugar content of such drinks.

«Energy drinks are not harmless, trendy beverages, — Guenther said. — They can become a real burden, especially for young people».

More than 100 countries tax sugary drinks, the World Health Organization says, including about half of the European Union’s member states, such ​as Belgium, France and Portugal.

The EU has no bloc-wide levy, leaving such measures to national governments.

Though Guenther’s conservative CDU ​party rejected the idea in February, backing has since come from some in the party as well as from the Greens and ‌Social Democrats.

A Forsa survey published in February showed about 60% of Germans supported a levy on soft drinks with high sugar content.

A 2023 modelling study led by ​researchers at the Technical University of Munich found that a levy modelled on Britain’s ​sugar tax could ⁠reduce daily sugar intake in Germany by 2-3 grams, prevent or delay up to about 244,000 cases of type 2 diabetes over 20 years and save as much as 16 billion euros ($17.3 billion) over that period.

Germany’s sugar industry association WVZ, meanwhile, ⁠says ​that a “punitive tax on sugar” could push manufacturers to replace sugar with ​artificial sweeteners without improving public health.

«A sugar tax creates the false impression that a single ingredient is to blame for the development of obesity. ​There is no scientifically reliable evidence for this», — said WVZ Director General Guenter Tissen.

More details: https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/germany-renews-push-sugar-tax-energy-drinks-ban-children-2026-03-25/

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