HWCF Evaluation Archives - Global Food Research Program https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/category/hwcf-evaluation/ at UNC-Chapel Hill Fri, 25 Jul 2025 00:10:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/cropped-GFRP_favicon-32x32.png HWCF Evaluation Archives - Global Food Research Program https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/category/hwcf-evaluation/ 32 32 UNC Study Shows Food and Beverage Companies Exceed Caloric Cut Pledge https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/press-release-companies-exceed-caloric-cut-pledge/ https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/press-release-companies-exceed-caloric-cut-pledge/#respond Wed, 17 Sep 2014 00:05:27 +0000 http://uncfoodresearchprogram.web.unc.edu/?p=703 Release from UNC Gillings School of Public Health – September 17, 2014 (CHAPEL HILL, N.C.) 16 of the world’s largest food and beverage producing companies pledged to help reduce obesity of American families with children two to 18 years old by pledging to eliminate 1 trillion calories from the products these companies sold in the […]

The post UNC Study Shows Food and Beverage Companies Exceed Caloric Cut Pledge appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
Release from UNC Gillings School of Public Health – September 17, 2014

(CHAPEL HILL, N.C.) 16 of the world’s largest food and beverage producing companies pledged to help reduce obesity of American families with children two to 18 years old by pledging to eliminate 1 trillion calories from the products these companies sold in the marketplace by 2012, with 2007 as the baseline year, and 1.5 trillion by 2015. The first comprehensive study of their efforts is in, and it reveals that both goals have been dramatically exceeded.

Two studies were completed by researchers from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and appear in the latest issue of American Journal of Preventative Medicine. The first study looked at the total marketplace change in calories sold from the 16 companies. The second study looked at what this meant in particular for the calories purchased by households with children. The researchers applied a more sophisticated analysis that allowed them to examine the impact of these companies independent of the effects of the Great Recession and demographic changes.

Among the findings was that the 16 participating food and beverage producers, who all are members of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation (HWCF), collectively sold 6.4 trillion fewer calories in 2012 than in 2007.

The independent study by the UNC researchers was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

How did these reductions translate to consumers on an individual basis?

“Controlling for the recession and other major economic changes, we found American families with children bought 101 fewer calories from packaged goods per person per day in 2012 than they did in 2007,” said Barry Popkin, PhD, the W.R. Kenan, Jr. Distinguished Professor in the Gillings School of Global Public Health at UNC, who is leading the UNC research team. “Much smaller changes occurred in households without children. A large proportion of this reduction was from grain-based desserts and other sweets and sugar-sweetened beverages.”

Popkin’s team made the analysis possible by building an unprecedented, thorough picture of the U.S. food system. They compiled data from many public and commercial sources that, for the first time, track the flow of foods and beverages that are sold, purchased, and consumed by Americans. This allows researchers to identify how different categories of foods and beverages contribute to American’s calorie intake.

“We’re now able to track how many calories families are buying, the source of those calories, and how both are changing over time,” said Popkin. “This new source of big data on food production and purchasing opens unprecedented opportunities to identify key factors affecting consumers’ food and beverage purchases and, by analyzing all components of our food and beverage purchasing patterns help to identify far-reaching solutions that benefit the health of Americans.”

The UNC researcher team determined which individual products were included as part of the HWCF pledge and tracked sales of those products over time. To calculate the number of calories purchased by families with children, researchers attributed individual products to the HWCF companies; food and beverage companies that were not part of the HWCF; or private label, store brand, or generic products that retailers control; and tracked purchases of those products over time. All data used were publicly or commercially available.

“We believe that while the HWCF and non-HWCF brands made cuts in calories purchased per day of 66 calories and 23 calories respectively, there was only a tiny reduction of 12 fewer calories from generic products and store brands,” said Popkin. “Retailers determine the nutritional content of their store brands [generic or private label] products. We need them to become a much greater part of the solution, as our research shows a rapid increase in US purchase of these store brand products.” ”

“What is unique about the food purchase study is that households were followed over time,” noted first author Shu Wen Ng.   “Our modeling approach allowed us to isolate the changes in purchases of companies’ products independent of the effects of changing food prices, unemployment and demographic make-up.”

Future studies conducted by the UNC team and funded by RWJF will show how HWCF’s calorie-reduction pledge has affected trends related to packaged foods and beverages based on race, ethnicity, income, and age from 2007 to 2012. The major new upcoming phase of this evaluation also will link food and beverage purchases to dietary intake among children ages 2 to 18 to examine how changes by the food and beverage industry changes have affected the actual dietary intake of US children.

The 16 companies committed to the HWCF calorie-reduction pledge include:

Bumble Bee Foods, LLC; Campbell Soup Company; ConAgra Foods (includes Ralston Foods); General Mills, Inc.; Hillshire Brands (previously Sara Lee Corporation); Kellogg Company; Kraft Foods Group/Mondelez; Mars, Incorporated; McCormick & Company, Inc.; Nestlé USA; PepsiCo, Inc.; Post Foods; The Coca-Cola Company; The Hershey Company; The J.M. Smucker Company; Unilever.

Find more information, including links to the studies, here.

The post UNC Study Shows Food and Beverage Companies Exceed Caloric Cut Pledge appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/press-release-companies-exceed-caloric-cut-pledge/feed/ 0
HWCF Evaluation Highlighted in News Reports of 6.4 Trillion Calorie Reduction https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-news-reports-of-6-4-trillion-calorie-reduction/ https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-news-reports-of-6-4-trillion-calorie-reduction/#respond Fri, 10 Jan 2014 14:36:26 +0000 http://uncfoodresearchprogram.web.unc.edu/?p=572 A Robert Wood Johnson Foundation press release highlighting UNCFRP research to evaluate the HWCF pledge to cut calories from the food supply was featured in stories from the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, Reuters, and several other news outlets. Sixteen of the nation’s leading food and beverage companies sold 6.4 trillion fewer […]

The post HWCF Evaluation Highlighted in News Reports of 6.4 Trillion Calorie Reduction appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
A Robert Wood Johnson Foundation press release highlighting UNCFRP research to evaluate the HWCF pledge to cut calories from the food supply was featured in stories from the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Associated Press, Reuters, and several other news outlets.

Sixteen of the nation’s leading food and beverage companies sold 6.4 trillion fewer calories in the United States in 2012 than they did in 2007, according to the findings of an independent evaluation funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) and announced today. The companies, acting together as part of the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation (HWCF), pledged to remove 1 trillion calories from the marketplace by 2012, and 1.5 trillion by 2015. The evaluation found that, thus far, the companies have exceeded their 2015 pledge by more than 400 percent.

Read more here: Major Food, Beverage Companies Remove 6.4 Trillion Calories from U.S. Marketplace

The post HWCF Evaluation Highlighted in News Reports of 6.4 Trillion Calorie Reduction appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-news-reports-of-6-4-trillion-calorie-reduction/feed/ 0
UNCFRP featured in AP’s “What do we eat? New food map will tell us” https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/uncfrp-featured-in-aps-what-do-we-eat-new-food-map-will-tell-us/ https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/uncfrp-featured-in-aps-what-do-we-eat-new-food-map-will-tell-us/#respond Mon, 20 May 2013 15:24:17 +0000 http://uncfoodresearchprogram.web.unc.edu/?p=490 Associated Press reporter Mary Clare Jalonick outlines our Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation Evaluation in an article titled “What do we eat? New food map will tell us” published May 20, 2013. Popkin and his researchers are hoping their project will only be the beginning of a map that consumers, companies, researchers and even the government […]

The post UNCFRP featured in AP’s “What do we eat? New food map will tell us” appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
Associated Press reporter Mary Clare Jalonick outlines our Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation Evaluation in an article titled “What do we eat? New food map will tell us” published May 20, 2013.

Popkin and his researchers are hoping their project will only be the beginning of a map that consumers, companies, researchers and even the government can use, breaking the data down to find out who is eating what and where they shop. Is there a racial divide in the brand of potato chips purchased, for example, and what could that mean for health? Does diet depend on where you buy your food — the grocery store or the convenience store? How has the recession affected dietary intake?

Read more here.

The post UNCFRP featured in AP’s “What do we eat? New food map will tell us” appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/uncfrp-featured-in-aps-what-do-we-eat-new-food-map-will-tell-us/feed/ 0
Upcoming HWCF Evaluation highlighted in Wall Street Journal https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/upcoming-hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-wall-street-journal/ https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/upcoming-hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-wall-street-journal/#respond Mon, 01 Apr 2013 19:09:56 +0000 http://uncfoodresearchprogram.web.unc.edu/?p=442 In the March 30, 2013 edition of the Wall Street Journal, this article featured a preview of our UNCFRP team’s upcoming “report card” on the HWCF Evaluation. In 2010, 16 food and drink makers made the joint pledge to shave one trillion calories from the products they sell in U.S. stores and vending machines by 2012, […]

The post Upcoming HWCF Evaluation highlighted in Wall Street Journal appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
In the March 30, 2013 edition of the Wall Street Journal, this article featured a preview of our UNCFRP team’s upcoming “report card” on the HWCF Evaluation.

In 2010, 16 food and drink makers made the joint pledge to shave one trillion calories from the products they sell in U.S. stores and vending machines by 2012, and 1.5 trillion calories by 2015, both compared with 2007 levels. The firms were all members of a newly formed group called the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation—the culmination of several years of talks with each other and with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation on how the industry could help shrink American waistlines.

Later this year, two reports are expected to shed light on how the food makers have done at meeting the 2012 goal. The firms’ foundation commissioned Georgetown Economic Services, a part of the Kelley Drye law firm, to evaluate its members’ progress. And the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a Princeton, N.J.-based body focusing on health issues, has tapped researchers at the University of North Carolina Food Research Program to independently monitor the bottom-line goal and to dive deeper into the data—seeing whether, for instance, the food makers should get credit for a cut in Americans’ consumption, or whether Americans were making healthier eating choices across the board, not just in their purchases from firms involved in the pledge.

Our team is excited about our new framework and system for measuring food and beverage sales and purchases along with consumption, and look forward to impartially evaluating the HWCF pledge.

Read more here: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324685104578388773889122996.html

The post Upcoming HWCF Evaluation highlighted in Wall Street Journal appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/upcoming-hwcf-evaluation-highlighted-in-wall-street-journal/feed/ 0
Upcoming HWCF Progress Report Mentioned by The Economist in “The World is Fat” https://www.globalfoodresearchprogram.org/upcoming-hwcf-report-in-economist/ Mon, 03 Dec 2012 18:15:41 +0000 http://uncfoodresearchprogram.web.unc.edu/?p=141 In The Economist’s The World in 2013 print edition, health-care correspondent Charlotte Howard discusses the threat obesity poses to both health systems and economies worldwide. She proposes “The Economist Diet” with specific policy advice and touches on the struggle between government intervention and marketplace pledges to decrease calories. Our team’s HWCF evaluation baseline report, due out […]

The post Upcoming HWCF Progress Report Mentioned by The Economist in “The World is Fat” appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>
In The Economist’s The World in 2013 print edition, health-care correspondent Charlotte Howard discusses the threat obesity poses to both health systems and economies worldwide. She proposes “The Economist Diet” with specific policy advice and touches on the struggle between government intervention and marketplace pledges to decrease calories. Our team’s HWCF evaluation baseline report, due out in early 2013 will provide the framework for evaluating this specific 1.5 trillion calorie reduction pledge.

Read more here: http://www.economist.com/news/21566294-obesity-spreads-developing-world-charlotte-howard-suggests-ways-fight-flab-world

The post Upcoming HWCF Progress Report Mentioned by The Economist in “The World is Fat” appeared first on Global Food Research Program.

]]>