|
Post by pledm on Jun 6, 2007 10:02:11 GMT -5
Dutch students develop powdered alcohol for minors
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Dutch students have developed powdered alcohol which they say can be sold legally to minors. The latest innovation in inebriation, called Booz2Go, is available in 20-gramme packets that cost 1-1.5 euros ($1.35-$2).
Top it up with water and you have a bubbly, lime-colored and -flavored drink with just 3 percent alcohol content.
"We are aiming for the youth market. They are really more into it because you can compare it with Bacardi-mixed drinks," 20-year-old Harm van Elderen told Reuters.
Van Elderen and four classmates at Helicon Vocational Institute, about an hour's drive from Amsterdam, came up with the idea as part of their final-year project.
"Because the alcohol is not in liquid form, we can sell it to people below 16," said project member Martyn van Nierop.
The legal age for drinking alcohol and smoking is 16 in the Netherlands.
In Germany, alcopops -- sweet drinks containing alcohol and in powder form -- caused quite a stir when launched on to the market. Alcohol powder, classified as a flavoring, was sold in the United States three years ago.
The students said companies interested in making the product commercially could avoid taxes because the alcohol was in powder form. A number of companies are interested, they said.
|
|
|
Post by Summer on Jun 6, 2007 11:55:36 GMT -5
Wow, I don't think selling alcohol to minors is such a good idea. Although I do wish the United States would ease up about the drinking age. If a boy must register for the draft at 18 when he becomes a legal adult, he should be able to drink when he wants to as well. But no! The drinking age here in the US is 21 all over the place. It's not fair in my opinion. Europe seems to know what they are doing far more than we do.
|
|