Pubdate: 20 Sep 1998 Source: The Observer (UK) Contact: Barry Hugill BREWERS FREED TO MIND THEIR OWN ALCOPOP BUSINESS The Government has abandoned plans to impose statutory control on the sale of alcopops. In what anti-alcohol campaigners see as capitulation to big brewers, the Home Office is set to allow them self-regulation. Lee Lizenberg of Alcohol Concern reacted with horror to the plan yesterday, which he considers a major climbdown. "The Home Office has given in to big business. It is allowing the people who produce alcopops to police the system - the people responsible for the problem in the first place." Alcopops were introduced in the summer of 1995. Most have an alcohol content of 5 per cent, the equivalent of a bottle of strong lager, but this is disguised by their sweet taste. Critics maintain that alcopops target young or under-age drinkers, a charge strongly denied. During 1995-96, sales tripled and market analysts believe they will double again by 2000. Last year Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, and Frank Dobson, the Health Secretary, threatened tough action on alcopops. But at a meeting early last week with the drink trade's own watchdog the Portman Group, George Howarth, the Home Office Minister who chairs the ministerial group on under-age drinking, said: "I warmly welcome the positive message and positive results of the revised code (the drinks industry's own). Ministers will be looking at the success of the code and wider initiatives." Under the code, brewers must not use labelling that "might be more likely to appeal to under-18s than to adults through usage of cartoon characters, artificially bright colours, or endorsement and promotion by personalities predominantly popular with under-18s". Nor must they "employ any association with violent, dangerous, illegal or anti-social behaviour, any allusion to illicit drugs and any suggestion of sexual success or prowess". Latest figures from the National Statistics Office show that, although there has been no increase during the 1990s in the proportion of 11-15 year-olds drinking, those who do drink are consuming much more. But Ministers are understood to accept that there is little evidence that children would abstain from alcohol were it not for alcopops. They believe alcopops are an additional option for children who would drink anyway. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake