Tuesday 6 May 2014

US Airways: No one fired for 'honest mistake' on lewd photo


US Airways has apologized after mistakenly tweeting an extremely graphic pornographic image to one of its followers, but no one is going to lose a job because of the mistake.
The Monday incident made US Airways a trending topic on Twitter, bringing the carrier unwanted publicity while some wondered aloud where the gaffe ranked among social-media mistakes by a mainstream corporate brand.
But US Airways — which is now part of American as those carriers continue on their merger — is showing some heart to the employee who mistakenly sent the image.
TODAY IN THE SKY: US Airways apologizes for lewd photo sent via Twitter
USA TODAY: Is US Airways' porn photo the worst of Twitter gaffes?
When asked by The Washington Post if any employee would be punished or terminated because of the incident, American spokesman Matt Miller responded: "No, absolutely not. It was an honest mistake."
The company says it all began when a Twitter user posted the graphic image on its Twitter feed. Then, an employee flagged the image for removal. But, in replying to another customer, the image was accidentally included as part of US Airways' reply.
US Airways repeated its remorse for the mistake.
ARCHIVES: American Airlines unveils first new look since 1968 (January 2013)
"First and foremost, we apologize," Miller says to the New York Daily News, reiterating the company's statements immediately following the mistake.
"We are in the midst of reviewing our processes but for the most part we have an understanding of what happened and how to ensure how it won't happen in the future," he adds to the Daily News.
TWITTER: You can follow me at twitter.com/TodayInTheSky

Looking for a job with NSA? Check Twitter

The National Security Agency will be sending out tweets about career opportunities this month.
Just make sure your code-breaking skills are up to par or that you have access to the Internet.
On Monday, the NSA tweeted from @NSACareers, "tpfccdlfdtte pcaccplircdt dklpcfrp?qeiq lhpqlipqeodf gpwafopwprti izxndkiqpkii krirrifcapnc dxkdciqcafmd vkfpcadf. #MissionMonday #NSA #news"

Federal report gauges U.S. impacts of global warming

Global warming is affecting where and how Americans live and work, and evidence is mounting that burning fossil fuels has made extreme weather such as heat waves and heavy precipitation much more likely in the USA, according to a massive federal report released Tuesday at the White House.
"Climate change is here and now, and not in some distant time or place," said Texas Tech University climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe, one of the authors of the 1,100-page National Climate Assessment (NCA), the largest, most comprehensive U.S.-focused climate change report ever produced.
"The choices we're making today will have a significant impact on our future," Hayhoe said.
The assessment was prepared by hundreds of the USA's top scientists. It agreed with a recent report by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that the planet is warming, mostly because of human activity.
The assessment provides "the loudest and clearest alarm bell to date" for immediate and aggressive climate action, said John P. Holdren, President Obama's science advisor, at a press conference in Washington today.
"All Americans will find things that matter to them in this report," added Jerry Melillo, chair of the National Climate Assessment Development Advisory Committee.
"Corn producers in Iowa, oyster growers in Washington State and maple syrup producers in Vermont are all observing climate-related changes that are outside of recent experience," the U.S. report stated. "So, too, are coastal planners in Florida, water managers in the arid Southwest, city dwellers from Phoenix to New York and native peoples on tribal lands from Louisiana to Alaska."
MORE: Stories on weathering the change
SPECIAL REPORT: Why you should sweat climate change
While scientists continue to refine projections of the future climate, observations unequivocally show that the climate is changing and that the warming of the past 50 years is primarily due to human-induced emissions of heat-trapping gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. These emissions come mainly from the burning of coal, oil and gas, the report states.
"If people took the time to read the report, they would see that it is not necessarily about polar bears, whales or butterflies," said meteorologist Marshall Shepherd of the University of Georgia. "I care about all of those, but the NCA is about our kids, dinner table issues, and our well being."
"We're already seeing extreme weather and it's happening now," said study co-author Donald Wuebbles, a climate scientist at the University of Illinois. "We're seeing more heat waves, particularly in the West and in the South."
Specifically, the three most significant threats from climate change in the USA are sea level rise along the coasts, droughts and fires in the Southwest and extreme precipitation events across the country.
The assessment was written by 300 scientists and other experts from academia; local, state and federal governments; the private sector; private citizens; and the non-profit sector. Representatives from oil companies such as ConocoPhillips and Chevron and environmental groups such as the Nature Conservancy endorsed the assessment's findings.
"The National Climate Assessment brings to light new and stronger evidence of how climate change is already having widespread impacts across the United States," according to Kevin Kennedy of the World Resources Institute, a Washington, D.C.- based environmental group.
"Chevron recognizes and shares the concerns of governments and the public about climate change," said Chevron spokesperson Justin Higgs. "Chevron's Arthur Lee was one of 60 committee members and 240 authors to assist in the compilation of this report. We recognize the importance of this issue and are committed to continued research and understanding."
A vast majority of climate scientists — generally pegged at 97% — concur with the basics of the science behind climate change, though some still find flaws in the details. A report last week, for instance, in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change found that the impacts of extreme heat are often exaggerated while the impacts of adaptation to the heat are underplayed.
The assessment is a federally mandated report prepared by the nation's top scientists every four years for the president and Congress to review. This is the third report produced.
The United States Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) coordinated the development of the NCA, which is exclusively focused on climate impacts to the United States, according to the requirements of the Global Change Research Act of 1990.
Contributing: Associated Press

South Korea diver dies in sunken ferry searches

South Korea diver dies in sunken ferry searches


SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Officials say that a civilian diver involved in searches for dozens of missing people from a ferry disaster has died.
Government task force spokesman Ko Myung-seok said the diver died at a hospital Tuesday after becoming unconscious following searches off the southern coast, where the Sewol sank on April 16.
Other task force team officials say the 53-year-old diver was pulled to the surface by fellow divers after losing communication.
The ferry disaster left 260 people dead, with about 40 others still missing. Government and civilian divers are fighting rapid currents as they try to retrieve the remaining bodies.
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Some parents angry about graphic sex education book

ST. CHARLES, Mo. — A controversial sex education book available to middle school students has some parents outraged and seeking to have it removed.
The book, titled "Perfectly Normal," contains cartoon drawings of naked people and others involved in sexual acts. It's available at middle school libraries. And although it indicates it's meant for kids 10 years and up, it's still making some parents uncomfortable.
"Most of the time, when I showed this to parents, their jaws just hit the floor," parent Tim Schmidt said. "They were shocked and then their next reaction was outrage."
According to the authors, the book talks about changing bodies, growing up, sex and sexual health.
"It has a lot of explicit drawings," said Schmidt, a father of two. "Cartoon images, life-like cartoon images. A look of nudity. It actually shows people having sex."
This is the first school year that the book has been in the Francis Howell School District. It's only available in e-form at the middle school libraries and it's not a part of the school curriculum.
Schmidt filed a formal complaint to have the book removed. The school district's only comment on this issue mainly addressed the complaint.
District officials say "it was determined to keep the ebook available as a resource for check-out in the library. If a parent determines that he/she does not want to their child to have access to certain materials, we honor that request."
Some parents are OK with the book, including June Tiller.
"I feel like if the school teaches them this, and they have this information available, it's very important, and it will help keep them safe," Tiller said.

Healthy Miley Cyrus ready to resume tour in London


Healthy Miley Cyrus ready to resume tour in London

The tongue-wagging star is ready to resume her Bangerz tour in London after a severe allergic reaction to antibiotics forced her to cancel several shows in the U.S. The Wrecking Ball singer spent nearly a week in the hospital.
Anniversary of missing Cleveland women's discovery
Tuesday marks one year since Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight escaped years of captivity inside the home of Ariel Castro in Cleveland. It also marks the anniversary of when Charles Ramsey skyrocketed to stardom for his role in helping the women escape. Ramsey, who emerged as the hero of the day, has written a book, Dead Giveaway, about the night of May 6, 2013, and his life before and after.
National Climate Assessment out today
The Obama administration releases the National Climate Assessment on Tuesday, detailing the potential impacts that climate change could have on the United States. Learn more about it at usatoday.com/news.
Primary voters head to the polls in Indiana, North Carolina and Ohio
Tuesday's Senate primary in North Carolina offers the latest gauge of whether the Republican Party establishment is winning the battle against the GOP's Tea Party factions. Two groups tied to mainstream Republican interests have spent a combined $2 million to boost Thom Tillis, the speaker of the state House of Representatives. Tea Party favorites such as Sen. Rand Paul have thrown their support behind the libertarian-leaning Greg Brannon. House Speaker John Boehner is expected to easily win his primary challenge in Ohio.
Six injured in hacking attack at Chinese station
A hacking attack at one of China's busiest train stations left six people injured, police said. The incident follows an attack in March that left over two dozen people dead. 
Bonus: 2014 NBA playoffs: Miami Heat vs. Brooklyn Nets
After sweeping its first-round playoff series, defending NBA champ Miami gets back on the court tonight at home against the Brooklyn Nets. Follow the action atnba.usatoday.com.

North Carolina Senate primary tests GOP loyalties

North Carolina GOP Senate candidates Thom Tillis, from left, Heather Grant, Greg Brannon and Mark Harris debate in Raleigh. (Gerry Broome, AP)
Voters in Indiana, North Carolina and Ohio go to the polls Tuesday, but all eyes are on the fight between the GOP establishment and the Tea Party in the Tar Heel state’s Senate primary.
The battle among eight North Carolina Republicans hoping to take on Democratic incumbent Kay Hagan is the first of several primaries in May testing Republican loyalties.
House Speaker Thom Tillis has racked up support from Mitt Romney, Jeb Bush and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.  Tillis needs 40% of the GOP vote to avoid a runoff, and asurvey by the Public Policy Polling released Monday showed him right at that mark.
Sen. Rand Paul, a 2016 presidential hopeful and Tea Party darling, made a last-minute appeal Monday on behalf of Greg Brannon, an obstetrician who shares many of the same libertarian views. “Send us a dragon slayer,” Paul told Brannon supporters gathered at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte.
Clay Aiken (Gerry Broome, AP)
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Clay Aiken (Gerry Broome, AP)
The other Republican Senate hopeful to watch: Mark Harris, a Charlotte pastor and former president of the North Carolina Baptist State Convention. Harris has the support of former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, a favorite of religious conservatives.
In a key congressional race, singer Clay Aiken of American Idol fame is vying for the Democratic nomination in North Carolina’s 2nd District. Aiken is facing an uphill battle in a district that Romney carried in the 2012 presidential election with 58% of the vote.
Aiken, a political novice, is running against Keith Crisco, a former North Carolina Commerce secretary who has outraised and outspent the singer. Mental health counselor Toni Morris is also in the Democratic field.
The Democrats are hoping to unseat GOP Rep. Renee Ellmers, a Tea Party favorite elected in 2010 and chairwoman of the Republican Women’s Policy Committee. She must first get past a primary challenge from Frank Roche, who has been attacking Ellmers on immigration.
In Ohio, House Speaker John Boehner is expected to easily defeat two primary challengers aligned with the Tea Party.

OECD calls to control rising UK house prices


The UK government should consider more restrictions on the Help to Buy scheme as house prices continue to rise, an economic forecaster has said.
Help to Buy is a two-pronged attempt to encourage activity in the UK housing market. Prices in many areas have risen since its launch.
The OECD has said that property prices were soaring when compared with rents and household incomes.
"Timely measures" could be used to stop the market overheating, it added.
How it worksThere are two elements to the Help to Buy system
The first, which was launched in England in April last year, in Scotland in September, and in Wales in January 2014, allows buyers to put down a deposit of 5% of the property's value. This has to be on a newly-built property.
This enables the buyers to take out a mortgage of up to 75% of the property's value. The difference is made up with an equity loan of up to 20% from the government.
During its first year, some 19,394 new homes were sold under the scheme. In the Budget, Chancellor George Osborne extended this element of Help to Buy in England until 2020.
The second phase of the scheme, which began across the UK last October and will run until the end of 2016, offers a government guarantee against losses for lenders who are prepared to offer mortgages to people with only a small deposit.
'Balanced recovery'
Since both elements of the scheme were started, average house prices have risen sharply in the UK.The latest figures from the Land Registry for March showed a year-on-year price rise of 5.6%. However, lenders have reported higher annual average increases.
A lack of supply of homes for sale to match increased demand has generally been considered to be the main reason behind the property price rises, which have been driven by increasing values in London and the south east of England.
The OECD said that action had already been taken to "restrain" housing demand fuelled by bank debt. It welcomed the withdrawal of Funding for Lending support for mortgage lending.
However, it said more could be done.
Tighter access to the Help to Buy programme, or demands for higher deposits from mortgage borrowers should be considered "to ensure a balanced recovery in the housing market", it said.
The Bank of England has said consistently that it has tools available to prevent the housing market growing into an unsustainable bubble.
However, Sir Jon Cunliffe, one of the Bank's deputy governors, told bankers last week that it would be "dangerous to ignore the momentum that has built up in the housing market".
Meanwhile, the UK Treasury said: "The chancellor has said we must remain vigilant in order to avoid repeating the mistakes of the past.
"This government has given the Bank of England new powers and new responsibilities to monitor risks in the economy and take action if necessary, something that did not happen before the crash."
Regarding the UK economy as a whole, the OECD said that the recovery had picked up to "a robust pace", and that an improving picture for jobs was assisting household consumption.

Chinese contingency plan if North Korean regime collapses leaked


Chinese contingency plans of action following the hypothetical collapse of North Korea's Communist regime have reportedly been leaked to the Japanese media, offering an intriguing look at how Pyongyang's staunchest ally would respond to such a cataclysmic event. 
The Daily Telegraph reports that the documents were drawn up by planners from China's People's Liberation Army and calls for the creation of refugee camps on the China-North Korea border, while detaining key North Korean leaders in special camps where they can be monitored. 
The idea of the camps, according to Kyodo News, which received the documents, would be twofold, preventing rival factions in North Korea or another "military power" from harming the deposed Pyongyang brass while also keeping them from directing military operations or other activities that might not be in Beijing's interest. 
China's 879-mile border with North Korea is commonly crossed by defectors from the so-called Hermit Kingdom, and the planners believe that any event resulting in the fall of the country's government would result in a humanitarian crisis as millions of refugees head for the border.
Despite China's support of North Korea, Kim Jong-un's regime has fallen afoul of Beijing several times in recent months, with the Chinese government recently warning that it would "by no means allow war or chaos to occur on our doorstep" in anticipation of a fourth nuclear test by North Korea. 
Veteran North Korea watchers say the timing of the leak suggests that China may have doubts about the strength of Kim Jong-un's grip on power in the totalitarian state. 
“What we have learned from the collapse of other dictatorships – the Soviet Union, Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya – is that the more totalitarian the regime, the harder and faster they fall,” Jun Okumurao of the Meiji Institute for Global Affairs told the Telegraph.
"This is why we need contingency plans and I am sure that the US and South Korea have extensive plans in place, but the release of Chinese measures is new."

WHO puts shackles on Pakistan over polio

ISLAMABAD: The inevitable has finally happened. To prevent the possible spread of the polio virus from Pakistan to other countries, the World Health Organisation (WHO) decided on Monday to impose strict travel restrictions on the country.
The decision was taken on the recommendation of the emergency committee of WHO, which had met on April 28 and suggested imposing travel restriction on Pakistan because of the continuous increase in polio cases in the country.
An official who works for WHO said that last year 60 per cent polio cases were a result of the international spread of the wild poliovirus. There was evidence that adult travellers contributed to this spread, he added.
Although polio only affects children, adults can be carriers of the disease.
The Minister of State for National Health Services, Saira Afzal Tarar, said that the government would try to address the concerns of the WHO so that by the next assessment (the decision will be reviewed in three months), the travel restrictions are reversed.
She said that the restrictions had been imposed on Syria and Cameroon along with Pakistan, while seven countries were warned to control the virus.
“I tried to avoid the ban by suggesting that the sanctions should be applicable on the Federally Administered Tribal Area, but the WHO said that it only dealt with international boundaries.”
Pakistan’s polio problem
The spread of polio in Pakistan has been a big worry for the past few years.
The virus strain of polio found in the country has affected as many as five countries over the past two years, becoming a serious threat to other countries.
Individual countries had already taken steps to stop the spread.
In February, India had banned the entry of travellers from Pakistan unless they had taken Oral Polio Vaccination (OPV) at least six week before the visit.
Saudi Arabia had back in 2000 made it mandatory that every Pakistani (children and adults) had taken OPV at the time of entry in that country.
Within Pakistan, each successive year has witnessed a higher number of children diagnosed with polio.
For example, in the first four months of the current year, 59 cases of polio have been recorded. The corresponding period last year witnessed only eight cases.
There is no single reason for the spread of the disease; the factors range from irrational fears to a limited campaign to militancy.
Many people appear to believe that the polio vaccine can cause fertility problems or that it is against Islam. The inefficacy of the drugs being used to vaccinate is also a problem as is the internal displacement due to which children have missed doses.
The problem was compounded by the killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2, 2011 – Dr Shakil Afridi is seen to have helped traced Osama through a fake polio vaccination drive, which too prejudiced people against the campaign. And since the incident, the Taliban and other militants have also opposed the polio vaccination campaign more aggressively.
All these factors have ensured that the government efforts remain sketchy at best.
An official of the ministry of national health services said that despite all the efforts of the ministry to raise awareness about the Extended Programme of Immunisation (EPI) in December last year, 47,099 children were missed all over Pakistan because their parents refused the vaccination.
And the resistance by the militants can be gauged from the fact that 40 polio workers and security officials have been killed during polio campaigns.
WHO meeting
According to an official statement issued by WHO, the April meeting was attended by representatives of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Israel, Nigeria, Somalia and Syria.
Calling the spread of the disease an ‘extraordinary event’ and a public health risk, the Emergency Committee of WHO said that “During 2014, international spread of wild poliovirus is being done from three of the 10 states that are currently infected. In central Asia, the virus is travelling from Pakistan to Afghanistan; in the Middle East it is travelling from Syria to Iraq and in central Africa it is travelling from Cameroon to Equatorial Guinea.”
It then recommended that “all residents and long-term visitors (less than four weeks) receive a dose of OPV or IPV between four weeks and 12 months prior to international travel”.
The meeting also pointed out that seven states – Afghanistan, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Iraq, Israel, Somalia and Nigeria – were infected with Wild Poliovirus, but they were not exporting the virus.
The WHO approved recommendations on Monday and decided to reassess the situation after three months.
Logistics to be worked out
It is already evident that is going to be a logistical nightmare to ensure Pakistani travellers have taken the drops before proceeding outside the country.
The government will not only have to set up a system of administering the vaccination but also issue a certificate. In addition, it will have to ensure that this facility is available to all those who use different exit points across the country.
Not everyone is convinced that the government has the resources to do this.
Dr Waseem Khawaja, a health expert, said that it would not be easy for already overburdened government hospitals to issue polio vaccination certificates to travellers. “Additional human resources and counters will be required.”
He pointed out that a majority of travellers, especially those going to the Middle East, would have to be educated and informed about the issue.
The health minister explained that she had called a meeting on Wednesday to formulate a strategy to deal with the travel ban.
“Certificates of polio vaccination will be issued from every hospital. We will also try to make arrangements to give the vaccine to people at airports as they are proceeding abroad. I am trying my best to ensure that no fee is charged for these polio certificates,” she said.
According to the minister, the restrictions would be implemented as soon as possible but not on those who had already reserved their seats.
She said that the government would try to start polio vaccination in Fata.
Meanwhile, Foreign Office spokesperson Tasnim Aslam said that Pakistan was in contact with WHO over the travel restriction.

Why Germans Love Russia

BERLIN — Like most foreign-policy experts, I was shocked by Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its continuing “soft invasion” of eastern Ukraine. Can such a naked land grab really be happening now, in 21st-century Europe?
But Russia’s actions were not the only surprise. If you have followed the German debate about the Ukraine crisis, you have witnessed another strange phenomenon: a parade of former politicians and public figures going on TV to make the case for Russia.
According to these august figures — including former Chancellors Gerhard Schröder and Helmut Schmidt — NATO and the European Union were the real aggressors, because they dared to expand into territory that belonged to Moscow’s legitimate sphere of interest. And it seems part of the German public agrees.
You thought that Germans were the champions of international law and a rules-based world order? Think again.
There is a blatant hypocrisy here. At times the same people who had relied on international law to attack the American invasion of Iraq are now, as newborn realists, excusing Russia’s need to infringe on the sovereignty of other nations.
In point of fact, despite its trumped-up charges against Iraq, the Bush administration had at least 16 United Nations Security Council resolutions to support its case. Vladimir V. Putin, Russia’s president, had zero. The only common denominator of both positions seems to be an underlying anti-Americanism.
Some of this pro-Moscow sentiment is the work of Russia-sponsored propaganda: A recent investigative report by the newspaper Welt am Sonntag revealed how a shady network of Russia supporters has shaped public discourse in Germany. Even dialogue forums with Russia, co-sponsored by the German government, are full of friends of Mr. Putin, even on the German side.
But there is also a disturbing undercurrent among ordinary Germans that harks back to old and unfortunate German traditions. We have come to think of Germany as a Western European country, but that is largely a product of Cold War alliances. Before then it occupied a precarious middle between east and west.
Twenty-five years after the end of the Cold War, German society may well be drifting away from the West again. In a poll last month by Infratest/dimap, 49 percent of Germans said they wanted their country to take a middle position between the West and Russia in the Ukraine crisis, and only 45 percent wanted to be firmly in the Western camp.
This anti-Westernism is coming from both sides of the political spectrum. There is the part of the left that is instinctively anti-American and takes the side of whatever international actor happens to challenge the status quo and the leading Western power.
Then there is Europe’s populist right, which agrees with Russia’s propaganda that Europe has become too gay, too tolerant, too permissive in its morals and too un-Christian, and which welcomes an authoritarian leader challenging Europe’s fuzzy multilateralism.
In Germany, you can find this current best represented by the new anti-euro Alternative für Deutschland Party. They take up a conservative strain of German thinking dating back to the 19th century, which harbors a resentment toward Western civilization and romanticizes a Russia seemingly uncorrupted by Western values and free-market capitalism.
Both versions of anti-Westernism have been around for decades; until now, though, they have been confined to the political fringes. These days they are accepted by parts of the elite and sections of the political center. That, combined with the enormous investment by German companies in Russia, is placing constraints on how aggressively the government of Angela Merkel, Germany’s strongly pro-Western chancellor, can act against Russia.

Coca-Cola to remove controversial drinks ingredient


The world's largest beverage-maker, Coca-Cola, plans to remove a controversial ingredient from some of its drinks brands by the end of this year, following an online petition.
Brominated vegetable oil, or BVO, is found in Coca-Cola fruit and sports drinks such as Fanta and Powerade.
An element of the additive, also found in flame retardants, could have negative health effects, activists say.
Rival Pepsi removed the chemical from its Gatorade sports drink last year.
A Pepsi spokesman said it also had wider plans to stop using BVO and had "been actively working to remove it from the rest of our product portfolio".Pepsi uses the ingredient in its Mountain Dew and Amp Energy drinks sold in the US.
'Safe'
Coca-Cola spokesman Josh Gold stressed the move to remove BVO was not an issue of safety.
"All of our beverages, including those with BVO, are safe and always have been - and comply with all regulations in the countries where they are sold," he said in a statement.
"The safety and quality of our products is our highest priority."
BVO has been used as a stabiliser in fruit-flavoured drinks as it helps to prevent ingredients from separating.
The health concerns stem from the fact BVO contains bromide, which is found in brominated flame retardants.
According to medical researchers at the Mayo Clinic, excessive consumption of soft drinks containing BVO has been linked to negative health effects, including reports of memory loss and skin and nerve problems.BVO was dropped from the US Food and Drug Administration's "Generally Recognized as Safe" list of food ingredients in 1970.
However, drinks companies are allowed to use BVO at up to 15 parts per million.
In Japan and the European Union, the use of BVO as a food additive is not allowed.
Food activism
Coca-Cola said it would switch to using sucrose acetate isobutyrate or glycerol ester of rosin, which is commonly found in chewing gum.
The Atlanta-based company said two flavours of its Powerade sports drink - fruit punch and strawberry lemonade - have already replaced BVO with glycerol ester of rosin.
Coca-Cola's decision to remove BVO from its drink reflects a growing move among companies to reconsider certain practices due to public pressure.
The campaign against the use of BVO was begun by Sarah Kavanagh, a teenager from Mississippi, who questioned why the ingredient was being used in drinks targeted at health-conscious athletes.
Thousands of people have since signed her online petition on Change.org to have BVO removed from drinks.
Following Monday's announcement by Coca-Cola and Pepsi, Ms Kavanagh was quoted as saying: "It's really good to know that companies, especially big companies, are listening to consumers.''

Europe ministers hope for boost on Ukraine elections

European foreign ministers are meeting to discuss the crisis in Ukraine, where the authorities have launched a crackdown on pro-Russian separatists.
Austria hopes backing will be given to this month's presidential election at the Council of Europe summit in Vienna.
The meeting comes days after Ukrainian security forces began an "anti-terrorism operation" in the east.
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said four soldiers and an estimated 30 separatists were killed near Sloviansk.
He said that up to 800 well-trained militants armed with large-calibre weapons and mortars were hiding among civilians in the town, where government buildings have been seized and checkpoints set up.
A Russia Today reporter in Sloviansk said residents were stockpiling food and there were barricades on almost every road
Fierce fighting in Sloviansk on Monday was followed by sporadic sniper fire, as Fergal Keane reports
Kiev accuses Moscow of supporting and arming the separatists - a claim denied by the Kremlin.
Meanwhile, many flights in and out of Donetsk were suspended early on Tuesday. Aviation authorities gave no reason for the move.
New checkpoints were earlier set up around Kiev. The interior ministry said it wanted to prevent the movement of weapons and explosives.
The authorities also attempted to re-establish control over Odessa, with Interim President Olexander Turchynov dismissing the acting head of the regional administration, Volodymyr Nemyrovskyy.
Forty-six people died in the Black Sea city on Friday in a fire at an official building and fighting between pro-Russian and pro-Ukrainian protesters.
German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he feared that neither Kiev nor Moscow could now control the forces unleashed in the east, and that the situation had "taken on a dynamic of its own".
"The bloody pictures from Odessa have shown us that we are just a few steps away from a military confrontation," he warned.
'Risk of civil war'
Austria, which currently chairs the committee of ministers of the Council of Europe, said it expected the 30 ministers attending Tuesday's meeting to discuss ways to defuse the situation in eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine's acting Foreign Minister Andriy Deshchytsia and his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, met briefly on the sidelines on Monday. The Austrian foreign ministry said they "spoke briefly, but not by themselves".
Pro-Russian armed men near the town of Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine (6 May 2014)The situation remained tense in Sloviansk on Tuesday, with pro-Russian gunmen reinforcing checkpoints
Passengers wait at Donetsk airport (6 May 2014)Ukraine's State Aviation Administration gave no reason for the closure of Donetsk airport
A tram passes a portrait of Andrey Biryukov, a pro-Ukrainian activist killed in clashes on Friday in Odessa (6 May 2014)In the south-western port city of Odessa, people mourned a pro-Ukrainian activist killed on Friday
"You cannot expect miracles from the conference because there won't be any, but hopefully, and this is my expectation, there will be clear backing from most countries for orderly and free [presidential] election on 25 May, because this could be a small step towards stabilising the country," Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz told Reuters news agency.
The election was called after pro-Kremlin President Viktor Yanukovych was overthrown by pro-Western protesters in February.
Moscow has dismissed plans to hold the presidential poll as "absurd".
However French President Francois Hollande has warned that there will be "chaos and the risk of civil war" if the election does not take place.
He told French radio on Tuesday that it was in Russia's interests to allow it "because it does not want to be seen as a country that wants to prevent another country - in this case Ukraine - from voting".
"Pressure must be put on it by all of Europe and by the United States through sanctions," Mr Hollande added.
How dependent is Europe upon Russian energy sources?
The EU and US imposed sanctions on individuals and companies linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin's "inner circle", as well as separatist leaders in Ukraine, when the Crimean peninsula was annexed in March by Russia.
Kiev has rejected the pro-Russian activists' demands for greater autonomy for eastern regions, fearing they could lead to the break-up of the country or more regions being annexed.
Separatists in Donetsk have proclaimed a "People's Republic" and are preparing to hold an independence referendum on Sunday.
The BBC's Sarah Rainsford in Donetsk says the referendum and Friday's Victory Day celebrations are potential flashpoints.