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ALCOHOL

Systembolaget mulls home delivery

Sweden's state-run alcohol retail monopoly Systembolaget is considering plans to expand its current e-commerce to include a home delivery service.

Systembolaget mulls home delivery

“We can maybe get going next year,” said Systembolaget head Magdalena Gerger to the Dagens Nyheter (DN) daily.

Gerger told DN that the state-owned firm is prepared to consider opening a home delivery service for customers at a cost of around 100 kronor ($15).

Gerger described the move as a major decision, in comparison to the extension of opening hours to include Saturdays.

“We have to adapt to the reality that people live in,” she said.

From the autumn Systembolaget will provide customers with a collection service, whereby pre-ordered items can be collected in-store. The firm is now looking at introducing the home delivery service at 1-2 days notice.

Temperance society IOGT-NTO is not however overly enamoured with the plans, questioning how age controls can be enforced.

“In Norway they have already had this set up for a while and they have had significant problems with age checks. Primarily the Norwegian postal service have reported that their staff find it tough to take those fights at the door,” IOGT-NTO head Anna Carlstedt told the TT news agency.

She said that IOGT-NTO as a great many members who have grown up in families with alcohol abuse and they think that it is of concern to be able to sit at home and order.

“We understand that the Systembolaget is looking at this possibility, because they handle the retail trade of alcohol in Sweden and or course the internet and the home are part of this trade. But that which concerns us is that when availability increases, so does drinking. That much we know.”

The Local reported in July on calls from Liberal Party (Folkpartiet) MP Carl B Hamilton’s call for Systembolaget to be authorised to expand their e-commerce to include home delivery.

Hamilton argued that “Systembolaget’s monopoly and legitimacy is based on citizens accepting the monopoly” and argue that providing improved service would offset calls for a liberalisation of the alcohol retail trade.

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ALCOHOL

Spain has second highest rate of daily alcohol drinkers in EU 

More than one in ten Spaniards drink alcohol every day, making them the Europeans who drink most regularly after the Portuguese, new Eurostat data reveals. 

Spain has second highest rate of daily alcohol drinkers in EU 
Photo: Cristina Quicler/AFP

Thirteen percent of people in Spain drink alcohol every day, a similar rate to Italy, where 12 percent enjoy a tipple on a daily basis, and only behind Portugal, where 20 percent of people have an alcoholic drink seven days a week.

That puts Spaniards above the EU average of 8.4 percent daily drinkers, data published by Eurostat in July 2021 reveals. 

This consistent alcoholic intake among Spaniards is far higher than in countries such as Sweden (1.8 percent daily drinkers), Poland (1.6 percent), Norway (1.4 percent), Estonia (1.3 percent) and Latvia (1.2 percent). 

However, the survey that looked at the frequency of alcohol consumption in people aged 15 and over shows that weekly and monthly drinking habits among Spaniards are more in line with European averages. 

A total of 22.9 percent of respondents from Spain said they drunk booze on a weekly basis, 18.3 percent every month, 12.5 percent less than once a month, and 33 percent haven’t had a drink ever or in the last year. 

Furthermore, another part of the study which looked at heavy episodic drinking found that Spaniards are the third least likely to get blind drunk, after Cypriots and Italians.

The Europeans who ingested more than 60 grammes of pure ethanol on a single occasion at least once a month in 2019 were Danes (37.8 percent), Romanians (35 percent), Luxembourgers (34.3 percent) and Germans (30.4 percent). 

The UK did not form part of the study but Ireland is included. 

Overall, Eurostat’s findings reflect how the Spanish habit of enjoying a glass of wine with a meal or a small beer (caña) outdoors with friends continues to be common daily practice, even though 13 percent does not make it prevalent. 

Spaniards’ tendency to drink in moderation also continues to prevail, even though a 2016 study by Danish pharmaceuticals company Lundbeck found that one in six people in the country still drinks too much. 

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