No Coke, only German "Afri Cola" at G8 summit
HEILIGENDAMM, Germany (Reuters) - Coca-Cola might style itself the real thing, but the U.S. beverage is hard to find at the Group of Eight summit.
Journalists at the three-day meeting have instead been offered a small German rival called Afri Cola bottled in a town close to the summit venue of Heiligendamm.
Organisers say there is no anti-American message behind the decision to give prominence to Afri Cola.
"It's a regional product and we wanted to plug a local beverage," said Jarste Weuffen, catering manager at the media centre and agriculture marketing director for the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
"Desite its long history in Germany, we view Afri Cola as a local product because of the bottler."
Introduced in 1931 as a would-be rival to Coca-Cola, Afri Cola has had some periods of modest success in Germany, partly due to its anti-Coca-Cola image, as well as its higher caffeine content and lower price.
But with 12 million drinks sold per year, Afri Cola is dwarfed by Coca-Cola, which sells 3.4 billion in Germany.
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