Summer of missing Diet Coke: Why your go-to drink is suddenly hard to find

Summer is starting to take full effect, and as temperatures rise, many are reaching for that familiar, chilled silver can of Diet Coke to beat the heat.

But this year, the go-to sugar-free drink may not be as easy to find. Across cities, shelves are running dry just when demand is at its peak, leaving consumers wondering why their usual refreshment is suddenly missing.

What looks like a simple stock-out, however, is tied to a much larger global disruption, one that begins with aluminium and stretches all the way to a conflict in the Middle East.

SHORTAGE THAT STARTS WITH THE CAN

The problem is not the drink itself, but what it comes in.

A shortage of aluminium beverage cans is hitting supplies of Diet Coke and other canned drinks across cities. Unlike other colas that are widely available in plastic bottles or glass, Diet Coke is largely dependent on cans.

That makes it more exposed when aluminium supply tightens.

At the same time, demand for sugar-free and low-sugar drinks has surged sharply. Sales in this segment have doubled over the past year, creating a mismatch where demand is rising just as supply is getting constrained.

THE GLOBAL ALUMINIUM SHOCK

Behind this shortage is a sharp and sustained spike in aluminium prices.

Globally, aluminium has surged to four-year highs on the London Metal Exchange, touching $3,672 per tonne earlier this month. In India, prices have climbed to around Rs 375 per kg.

What makes this surge significant is not just the price, but the scale of disruption behind it.

The global aluminium market is currently witnessing a “black swan” event, a rare and unpredictable shock, reported news agency Reuters.

Nick Snowdon, head of metals and mining research at commodity trader Mercuria, told Reuters, “The scale of the supply shock we’re seeing in the aluminium market is probably the largest single supply shock a base metals market has suffered in the post-2000 era.”

“We are already in a ‘black swan’ event. No one could have foreseen something on this scale,” he told Reuters.

WHY THE MIDDLE EAST WAR IS TO BLAME

The trigger for this disruption lies in the ongoing conflict involving Iran.

The Middle East accounts for about 7 million metric tonnes of aluminium smelting capacity — roughly 9% of global supply. While the region may not dominate production, disruptions here have an outsized impact on global trade flows and supply chains.

The war has affected shipping routes, increased freight and insurance costs, and created uncertainty around the movement of key raw materials like alumina, which is essential for aluminium production.

If flows through critical routes such as the Strait of Hormuz are disrupted, supply could tighten further.

A MARKET WITH VERY LITTLE BUFFER

The numbers show just how tight the market has become.

Mercuria estimates a supply deficit of at least 2 million tonnes this year, and that could be a conservative estimate. This shortfall is being compared against roughly 1.5 million tonnes of visible inventory and just over 3 million tonnes of total global stock.

In simple terms, there isn’t enough buffer to absorb the shock.

Replacing this supply is also not easy. China, the world’s largest producer, is already operating under output limits, while the US and Europe have very little idle capacity that can be brought back quickly.

This structural tightness is what is keeping aluminium prices elevated.

WHY ALUMINIUM PRICES ARE RISING FURTHER

Beyond geopolitics, multiple factors are pushing aluminium higher.

Demand from construction, automotive and packaging sectors remains strong. At the same time, supply disruptions and rising energy costs are making production more expensive.

Aluminium smelting is highly energy-intensive, and with oil prices rising, the cost of electricity has also gone up globally. This directly feeds into higher production costs, which are then passed on to buyers.

The result is a perfect storm — strong demand, constrained supply, and rising costs.

For beverage companies, this global disruption is translating into immediate challenges.

With domestic supply falling short, companies are increasingly importing aluminium cans from regions like West Asia and Southeast Asia — often at significantly higher costs. Packaging expenses across the board are rising, from cans to glass and cartons.

Some manufacturers are operating at reduced capacity due to shortages, while others are prioritising certain products over others based on margins and availability.

And that is where consumers start to feel the impact.

GEN Z’S GO-TO DRINK TAKES A HIT

Among those affected the most are younger consumers.

For many Gen Z buyers, Diet Coke has become a daily staple — a go-to beverage that fits into a low-sugar lifestyle. With supplies tightening, social media platforms like X and Instagram are already seeing posts about the drink becoming hard to find.

In some cases, consumers are turning to bulk buying when stocks appear online, making the shortage even more visible.

What makes this moment interesting is how something as small as a missing can reflects a much larger story.

A geopolitical conflict disrupts supply chains. Aluminium prices surge. Packaging becomes scarce. And suddenly, a consumer in India cannot find their preferred drink on a hot summer day.

It is a reminder that in today’s interconnected world, even the most everyday products are tied to global forces far beyond them.

This summer, the missing Diet Coke is not just about supply. It is about how deeply the world’s systems are linked — and how quickly that link can be felt.

Latest

Sensex tumbles 600 points: 4 things investors must know

At around 9:50 am, the BSE Sensex was down 628.98 points, or 0.79%, at 78,644.35, while the NSE Nifty50 slipped 162.80 points, or 0.66%, to 24,413.80.

HCLTech, TCS, Infosys tumble up to 9%: Why are IT stocks falling today?

At around 9:18 am, HCLTech was the biggest hit among IT stocks, plunging 9.1% to Rs 1,310.05 after its earnings update. Infosys fell 2.5% to Rs 1,280.85, Tata C

Explained: Why HCLTech shares tumbled 10% after Q4 results

The stock fell 9.64% to Rs 1,302.60 at 9:18 am, making it the biggest loser among frontline technology names. Other IT stocks also fell sharply in early trade.

Sensex falls 300 points, Nifty below 24,500; IT stocks tank

Sensex falls 300 points, Nifty below 24,500; IT stocks tank

RBI updates e-mandate rules for transactions over Rs 15,000. Check details

Understand the RBI’s latest e-mandate changes for enhanced payment security

Topics

ICSE, ISC board results not to be declared today, confirms CISCE official

The Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE) has confirmed that ICSE and ISC results will not be released today. Students will have to wai

Delhi schools to ring hourly water bell to fight heatwave dehydration

Amidst the soaring temperatures, Delhi schools take proactive measures to ensure student safety.

South vs North: When Nari Shakti politics re-opened a dangerous trust deficit

What began as a debate over women's representation in Parliament last week quickly reopened a far more contentious question: delimitation, and with it, the spec

Sensex tumbles 600 points: 4 things investors must know

At around 9:50 am, the BSE Sensex was down 628.98 points, or 0.79%, at 78,644.35, while the NSE Nifty50 slipped 162.80 points, or 0.66%, to 24,413.80.

HCLTech, TCS, Infosys tumble up to 9%: Why are IT stocks falling today?

At around 9:18 am, HCLTech was the biggest hit among IT stocks, plunging 9.1% to Rs 1,310.05 after its earnings update. Infosys fell 2.5% to Rs 1,280.85, Tata C

Explained: Why HCLTech shares tumbled 10% after Q4 results

The stock fell 9.64% to Rs 1,302.60 at 9:18 am, making it the biggest loser among frontline technology names. Other IT stocks also fell sharply in early trade.

Sensex falls 300 points, Nifty below 24,500; IT stocks tank

Sensex falls 300 points, Nifty below 24,500; IT stocks tank

Perfume, ink, glue on EVMs will be tampering: EC before Bengal, Tamil Nadu polls

The poll panel warned that applying fragrances on EVM buttons to track votes violates ballot secrecy, and directed officials to inspect machines thoroughly, ens
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img