Peru, May 09: Lima-based Kokka Royal food, set up by Spanish and Peruvian investors with an initial investment of 300,000 dollar, is trying to make the most of legal Coca. In February, the company began selling its iced tea called K-drink in Peru, giving away free samples in supermarkets, and calling it ''divine energy''. ‘‘It’s a completely natural stimulant that is not addictive,'' said company director Eduardo Mazzini. The company, which has sold 75,000 bottles of k-drink between February and mid-April, hopes to turn a profit by the end of 2005, according to Kokka's general manager Cristina Tudela. ''We also aim to export to the Netherlands, Italy and Spain,'' said Tudela. Coca-Cola already uses a Coca extract in its formula, although the cocaine-producing alkaloid was removed from the drink more than a 100 years ago. K-drink will try to leave that alkaloid in because the company says it is part of the drink's make-up. ‘‘We know we will come up against international laws that prohibit exporting the alkaloid, but we hope to be treated as an exception,'' Tudela said. Bureau Report