ZURICH/LONDON (Reuters) - Nestle (>> Nestle SA) and Coca-Cola Co (>> The Coca-Cola Co) have agreed to end their Nestea iced tea joint venture after 16 years and pursue separate strategies in the fast-changing bottled drinks market.

The companies formed Beverage Partners Worldwide in 2001 to sell Nestea around the world but the brand has faced fierce competition from Lipton iced tea, which is sold by a venture between Unilever (>> Unilever plc) and PepsiCo (>> PepsiCo, Inc.).

Consumers are also moving away from sweetened bottled drinks toward water due to concerns about health and the environment.

Nestle announced a revamp of the Nestea brand last month, changing its formula and packaging. The new fruit-flavoured Nestea drinks are made with sugar and stevia and have no corn syrup, artificial colours and flavours, nor GMO ingredients.

"The ready-to-drink tea market has evolved, and Nestle believes the time is right to develop Nestea independently," the company said on Friday, announcing the end of the venture that had already been scaled back to just Europe and Canada in 2012.

Nestle said on Friday that Coke would retain a licence to make and sell Nestea in Canada, Spain, Portugal, Andorra, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria.

The Nestle Waters division, which manages the brand in several countries including the United States, will also manage Nestea in European countries not affected by the licensing agreements with Coke, it said.

(Reporting by Michael Shields and Martinne Geller; editing by David Clarke)

Stocks treated in this article : The Coca-Cola Co, Unilever, PepsiCo, Inc., Nestle SA, Unilever plc