JAPAN – Coca-Cola will introduce the first alcoholic drink in the company’s 125-year history, tapping into a growing trend in Japan for mildly intoxicating drink mixes.

The new brand will compete in a category known as Chu-Hi- which also includes sparkling water and flavouring- to which the main ingredient is a vodka-like distillation of rice, barley and potatoes known as shōchū.

“We haven’t experimented in the low alcohol category before, but it’s an example of how we continue to explore opportunities outside our core areas,” Jorge Garduño, president of Coca-Cola’s Japan business unit, said recently on its website.

Garduño said the move into alcoholic drinks “is unique in our history,” adding that entering the Chu-Hi market “is a modest experiment for a specific slice of our market.”

“It makes sense to give this a try in our market,” he said.

“But I don’t think people around the world should expect to see this kind of thing from Coca-Cola.”

According to The Financial Times, the Chu-Hi market reportedly has hundreds of flavors and varieties, such as Strong Zero, Highball Lemon and Slat, and according to the Japanese producer, Suntory has seen growth between 5% and 25% annually since 2013.

“Chu-Hi canned drinks mostly range in alcohol content between 3 and 8% — a profile that has put them in direct competition with beer, and proved particularly attractive to female drinkers.

The appeal of Chu-Hi has been enhanced by the relentless trial-and-error approach by major Japanese producers Kirin, Asahi, Takara and Suntory, which have released flavours that include yoghurt, acerola and wild basil.”

Fortune added that; “Coke’s Japanese business is unusually experimental, trying out 100 new products on average each year.

Along with the new Chu-Hi, the firm will this year also launch the excitingly-named ‘THE TANSAN,’ which Garduño said ‘features the strongest carbonation ever in our products in this country, to reach health conscious adult sparkling lovers.’

“Last year, it launched a version of Coke with added fiber, called Coca-Cola Plus, with Japan’s ageing population in mind.”

However, no information has been provided yet on what the new alcoholic drink will be called or when it will be launched.

National Public Radio