Major UK supermarket will restock Prime energy drinks TOMORROW – but sales will be subject to strict rules
- Aldi announced on Twitter it is restocking the drink promoted by YouTuber stars
- READ MORE: Prime has sparked muggings, near-riots in shops – and sells for up to £100 a bottle. So what on earth is all the fuss about?
The most in-demand energy drinks in the UK will be back on supermarket shelves from tomorrow as a major retailer announces a restock.
Budget supermarket giant Aldi has said it will be offering the energy drinks, from YouTube stars KSI and Logan Paul, from Tuesday 18 April.
The supermarket teased the return of the product on Twitter today, writing: ‘Getting prepped and PRIMEd for a popular product that may be returning tomorrow…’
The announcement comes after shoppers were sent into a frenzy when the drinks were first released, with chaotic scenes from supermarkets up and down the country showing people getting into scuffles over the product.
It also follows KSI’s controversial broadcast with his YouTube gang The Sidemen in which he was accused of racism following his use of the word ‘p***’ during a Countdown skit.
Aldi has announced it will be restocking Prime energy drinks from tomorrow and will have six flavours on offer in total
As the supermarket prepares for what is likely to be another flurry of demand for the products, it warned customers they will only be able to buy one bottle per person of each flavour.
In another tweet, it revealed it would be stocking six flavours of the drink including lemon lime and meta moon.
The bottles will be sold for £1.99 each, but the supermarket has warned that once they’re gone, they’re gone.
Following the announcement, excited shoppers responded to suggest they were already preparing for chaos in order to pick up a bottle.
Prime, which was created by YouTube stars KSI and Logan Paul, often sells out within minutes of reaching supermarket stores
One person wrote: ‘This is going to be one stressful pre school run visit to my local store to try and get some.’
So what is actually in the viral Prime drink?
The drink launched by influencer boxers Logan Paul and KSI has been marketed as a healthy alternative to many energy drinks.
The vast majority of each 500ml bottle is filtered water, mixed with 10 per cent coconut water.
The latter is good source of minerals like potassium, magnesium, calcium and sodium important components of in heart, skeletal and muscle health.
Branding around Prime boasts it contains no added sugar and zero caffeine. Therefore it isn’t really an energy drink.
Cans of energy drinks, and in particular their consumption by young people, have been controversial as some can contain more than 80g of sugar and have as much caffeine as three cups of coffee.
In comparison, prime only has 2g of sugar per bottle, about 7 per cent of an adult’s recommended intake. It instead gets its sweetness from a substances Sucralose and Acesulfame K.
These are both artificial sweeteners, a family of low-calorie chemicals used instead of sugar.
While there have been some health concerns about these substances, health authorities say they are safe.
However, some studies have suggested sweeteners can stimulate appetite or alter the gut microbiome and therefore increase the risk of weight gain and obesity.
Another customer dismissed the idea altogether, claiming: ‘I can’t face it’.
One customer, who decided not to get caught up in the madness, joked they were ‘cancelling [their] big shop’ so they didn’t have to deal with how busy it would be.
After Prime was first launched in the US last year, it has been estimated that more than 100 million bottles have now been sold worldwide.
The popularity of the energy drink, which is mainly comprised of filtered water and coconut water, is thought to have been fuelled by the enormous social media reach of KSI and Logan Paul.
In February, the launch of a new flavour of the drink sent shoppers wild as people were filmed queueing for hours outside supermarkets to get their hands on bottles.
Shocking footage emerged of a branch of Sainsbury’s in Liverpool where shoppers fought over bottles of the orange and mango flavour.
As the entrance opened for the first time, scenes soon descended into carnage as impatient shoppers, including both adults and children, climbed over each other in a desperate bid to reach the bottles.
Furious staff, who had moments earlier warned of a three-bottle limit per person, could be heard urging the customers to ‘stop f***ing pushing’.
Another individual could be heard saying, ‘guys, it’s just a drink’.
Children were seen in the crush as staff members tried to prevent the fighting.
And when the drink first arrived in the UK in June last year, scenes of pandemonium broke out.
Demand for the drinks outpaced supply as youngsters tried to emulate their social media heroes.
When Aldi started selling Prime last December, limiting bottles to one per person, customers queued at dawn and were pictured jumping over shelves in the frenzy to get their hands on it.
Wakefield Wines, an off-licence in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, went viral after reportedly selling bottles for £100 each, while a 12-pack was advertised for £50,000 on auction site eBay, together fuelling the demand further.
But the craze acquired a sinister edge when a 17-year-old in Kent was arrested for stealing a case, and reports emerged of children being bullied into handing over their drinks.
One ten-year-old was also reportedly punched in the face when he refused to give his drink to a group of teenagers in the park.
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