Bartenders prepare drinks at the Cobra bar in Prague, Czech Republic, 18 December 2024; Credit: Reuters/David W Cerny/File photo

GENEVA (Reuters) - On Friday 14 February 2025, the World Health Organization (WHO) released new findings about an "alarming" lack of awareness about alcohol's link to cancer across Europe and called for clear and prominent tobacco-style warnings in the region with the world's heaviest drinkers.

The global health agency has repeatedly warned that alcohol causes cancer and has backed clear labelling but has never before been as prescriptive in its call for new government regulations.

Earlier this year, the US Surgeon General also called for warnings of cancer risks on alcoholic drink labels.

Alcohol causes 800,000 deaths across Europe each year but just a fraction of the population is aware of the risks, the WHO's Europe office said. Its study found that just 15% of respondents knew that alcohol can cause breast cancer and 39% were aware of its link to colon cancer.

"Despite cancer being the leading cause of alcohol-attributable deaths in the European Union (EU), public awareness of the link between alcohol and cancer remains alarmingly low," the WHO said.

Relying on self-regulation, as the industry would prefer, brings the risk that alcohol producers use "inconspicuous placement and ambiguous messaging" or use QR codes which tend to be ignored by shoppers, it said.

Instead, alcoholic drinks should display "clear and prominent health warnings" in written format which could be combined with pictures "to maximise reach and empower consumers with clear, accurate information to make informed choices about their health," it said.

Pictograms and simple text-only messages can be just as effective as more graphic photographs, a spokesperson said when asked about the types of warnings.

Currently, just three out of 27 EU countries - France, Lithuania and Germany - have some form of warning labels, the WHO said. Ireland plans broader cancer warnings on alcoholic drinks from May 2026, it said.