Nutritional facts:
– US Version:
– Calories: 45 (190kJ)
– Total Fat: 0 g
– Sodium: 35mg
– Total Carb.: 13 g
– Sugars: 12 g
– French Version:
– Calories: 20 (84kJ)
– Total Fat: 0 g
– Sodium: 50mg
– Total Carb.: 5 g
– Sugars: 5 g
– Protein: 0 g
– Caffeine: US – 46mg, French – 23mg
Launch and discontinuation:
– Introduced in 2006, discontinued in 2008
– Launched in France first, then in other markets
– Launched in the US on April 3, 2006, and in Canada on August 29, 2006
– Trade magazine Beverage Digest noted discontinuation in the US in August 2007
– Different sweeteners used in different versions
Packaging details:
– American and Canadian versions had a plastic resealable cap on a glass bottle
– French/Czech version was a bottle shape formed in aluminum
– Resemblance of the packaging to classic Coke bottle
Expansion and rebranding:
– In 2010, Coca-Cola FEMSA released coffee dispenser machines in Mexico under the brand name Blak
– In 2019, plans to introduce coffee-related products across 25 markets
– Coffee-Coca-Cola blend with varying caffeine content
– European market rollout followed by US release in 2021
Related links:
– Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (66.5%)
– Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (19.5%)
– Coca-Cola FEMSA (28%)
– Coca-Cola Hellenic (23.2%)
– Bambi (23.0%)
– Legal cases involving Coca-Cola
– Campaigns and slogans by Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola Blak (stylized as Coca-Cola BlāK) was a coffee-flavored soft drink introduced by Coca-Cola in 2006 and discontinued in 2008. The mid-calorie drink was introduced first in France and subsequently in other markets, including Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Lithuania.
Type | Coffee-flavored cola |
---|---|
Manufacturer | The Coca-Cola Company |
Country of origin | France |
Introduced | 2006 |
Discontinued | 2008 |
Related products | Pepsi Tarik Pepsi Cappuccino |
Coca-Cola Blak launched in the United States on April 3, and in Canada on August 29, 2006 in Toronto, Ontario, at Dundas Square. In August 2007, trade magazine Beverage Digest noted that Coca-Cola would discontinue the drink within the United States.
The French and Canadian versions of Coca-Cola Blak were sweetened with sugar. The U.S. version of Coca-Cola Blak replaced sugar with high fructose corn syrup, aspartame, and acesulfame potassium. Consumer Reports taste-testers found the French version to be less sweet and to contain more coffee flavor.[citation needed]
The American and Canadian versions had a plastic resealable cap on a glass bottle that resembled the classic Coke bottle, where the French/Czech version was a bottle shape formed in aluminum.[citation needed]
In 2010, Coca-Cola FEMSA, the largest Coca-Cola bottler in Latin America, released coffee dispenser machines in Mexico under the brand name Blak.
In 2019, it was reported that Coca-Cola have started to plan an introduction of coffee-related products across 25 markets by the end of the year. The coffee has been planned to combine Coca-Cola with coffee, which will contain less caffeine than a regular cup of coffee but more than a regular can of Coke. This rollout, which started in European markets, culminated in the release of Coca-Cola with Coffee in the US on January 25, 2021.