McDonald's to launch bagged coffee in Canada

Updated 27 October 2012
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McDonald's to launch bagged coffee in Canada

NEW YORK: McDonald's Corp will start selling bags of its ground coffee in major Canadian stores in November, its Canadian chief said, in a likely challenge to rivals like Starbucks Corp, Dunkin' Donuts and Tim Hortons Inc.
The McCafe-branded coffee, priced at C$ 6.99 for 340 grams (12 ounces), is being launched as McDonald's steps up its expansion in Canada after holding back for more than five years.
Representatives for McDonald's said they were not aware of the company selling bagged coffee anywhere outside Canada.
Earlier this month, market watchers noticed McDonald's had filed with the US Patent and Trademark Office to use its McCafe brand for "ground and whole bean coffee." Some speculated that the company might launch bagged coffee in the US market.
Speaking in an interview, McDonald's Canada President John Betts credited the coffee business for a turnaround at his unit and said there was the potential for a much larger footprint across the country.
"This year, we're going to build more restaurants than we've built in the last seven or eight years," he said. "Next year, it's going to ramp up from that."
Around 30 new stores will open by the end of 2012, Betts said. He did not give specific figures for future periods. McDonald's has about 1,400 outlets in Canada.
Coffee is not an obvious point of entry in Canada, where Starbucks is ubiquitous and doughnut and coffee chain Tim Hortons borders on a national symbol. But between McDonald's coffee push and Tim Hortons' expanding lunch menu, the two chains are increasingly going head to head.
Tim Hortons, Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts already sell packaged coffee.
A US spokeswoman for McDonald's said this is not the first time McDonald's has sold bagged coffee, but did not offer other examples.
Privately held Mother Parkers Tea & Coffee, McDonald's long-time coffee supplier in Canada, will also provide the bagged coffee for the chain.
Betts' upbeat message stands out against last week's earnings release, when McDonald's reported its worst quarterly restaurant sales growth in nine years thanks to tough competition in the US.
All the Canadian stores will give out free takeout coffee next week, Betts said, the eighth round of that promotion, which the company has also run in some US stores.
In the company's home market, fast-food players are dueling for customers with aggressive promotions, and bagged coffee and similar products have become a significant line of business.
In Starbucks' fiscal year ended Oct. 2, 2011, bagged coffee, bottled drinks and coffee served in hotels and offices accounted for $ 1.06 billion of its $ 11.70 billion in overall revenue.
Still, Bernstein Research analyst Sara Senatore said a McDonald's entry into the bagged coffee market would not necessarily shake up the US market.
"It's a different price point, flavor profile, and customer" than Starbucks, she wrote in an email. "The others may be closer in flavor profile but again, (Dunkin's) business seems to have held up well in the face of (McDonald's) entry into specialty coffee."
McDonald's started rolling out its McCafe line, which now includes espresso-based beverages and smoothies, in 2009.
Over the long term, Betts said, McDonald's may also look at the expanding market for single-cup coffee brewing.
The company does not currently sell K-cups, used in Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc's Keurig machines, or similar products for competing systems.
"Down the road, as our coffee journey and beverage journey evolves, we'll look at other things, certainly grocery, and K-cups and all those kind of things," said Betts.
Tim Hortons recently entered the single-serve coffee market, joining chains like Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts, a unit of Dunkin' Brands.


Acwa appoints Samir Serhan as CEO in planned succession 

Updated 01 March 2026
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Acwa appoints Samir Serhan as CEO in planned succession 

RIYADH: Saudi utility developer Acwa appointed Samir J. Serhan as CEO effective March 1, replacing Marco Arcelli in a planned leadership transition as the company accelerates global expansion in renewable energy, desalination and green hydrogen. 

The Tadawul-listed company said the appointment forms part of a structured succession plan approved by its board, taking into account the scheduled expiration of Arcelli’s contract in April 2027. Arcelli, who has led Acwa since March 2023, will remain adviser to the chairman to support an orderly transition, according to a regulatory disclosure to Tadawul. 

The leadership change comes as Acwa — one of the world’s largest private desalination companies and a major investor in energy transition projects — continues to scale its international portfolio amid rising demand for clean power and water infrastructure. 

Mohammad Abunayyan, founder and chairman of the board of directors of Acwa, said: “Acwa stands today as a Saudi national champion and a global leader in renewable energy, water desalination, and green hydrogen, and our position continues to strengthen.” 

He added: “This structured leadership transition reflects the strength of our governance and the maturity of our business platform. Our strategic direction remains clear and unchanged. We are pleased to welcome Dr. Samir Serhan to his new role as CEO of Acwa.” 

Serhan joined Acwa last year as president of Saudi Arabia and Middle East, where he was responsible for seven key markets, including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Jordan and Iraq. 

“I’m honored to lead Acwa at a pivotal moment as the company accelerates profitable global growth in renewable energy, water desalination, and green hydrogen solutions — including advancing green hydrogen to decarbonize heavy industries — to deliver scalable, sustainable impact worldwide,” said Serhan. 

Previously, Serhan served as chief operating officer of the US-based company Air Products, where he had global responsibility for operational business and project execution with profit and loss accountability across the Americas, Asia, Europe, Africa, the Middle East and India. He also led technology, global engineering, manufacturing and equipment functions at Air Products.  

Earlier in his career, he was president, Hydrogen for Praxair. For 14 years prior, he worked at the Linde Group in leadership positions in the US and Germany, culminating in his role as managing director of Linde Engineering. 

Acwa, recently rebranded from ACWA Power, is a key developer of power and water infrastructure projects under public-private partnership models and plays a central role in Saudi Arabia’s energy transition strategy.