UK craft beer industry faces huge challenges, says MP

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Chippy_Tea

Landlord.
Staff member
Administrator
Moderator
Joined
Mar 17, 2013
Messages
54,001
Reaction score
20,972
Location
Ulverston Cumbria.
The UK's brewing industry is "in real crisis" due to soaring costs and consumers having less disposable income, an MP has warned.

Brewer Anthony Barrett says it is very tough for breweries to survive, let alone thrive

1675516233593.png


About 80 breweries called time in 2022, and one industry expert fears more than triple that number could go this year.
Labour MP Charlotte Nichols, who chairs the All Party Parliamentary Group on Pubs, has asked for targeted help.
The government said support included an alcohol duty freeze and assistance with business rates and energy bills.
Until it closed its doors just before Christmas, Twisted Wheel Brew Co was based in Ms Nicolson's Warrington North constituency.
Head brewer Anthony Barrett has just resurrected the brand and is setting out on his own, albeit initially producing much smaller volumes.
He said the brewery's collapse in its previous form was linked to the aftermath of the pandemic.
"When we came out of Covid, we had no reserves or anything and then the cost-of-living crisis hit and people are scared of going out and spending."
Mr Barrett acknowledged that some longstanding wider issues within the industry had also not helped.
In some parts of the industry, he said, "it was always a race to the bottom.
"Breweries out there charging next to nothing for beer and the consumer got used to that.
"I think now it's really biting people because people expect especially cask beer to be quite cheap and it's no longer cheap to produce - it's actually very expensive."
Mr Barrett does not own his own kit so he is making his beer at another brewery about 25 miles away in Chorley, Lancashire.
Twisted Wheel's previous brewery had a kit of 3,200 litres but he's now working on 700 litres.
Saying he was now working with a 700-litre kit as opposed to the previous 3,200-litre version, he said: "It's a lot, lot smaller".
Mr Barrett admitted he was going to "try and keep going until everything stabilises a bit".
"I think the next six-to-12 months are going to be tough for everybody - hopefully if I can sell enough beer to keep everything going we can re-evaluate in a year and if we can grow, we'll grow."

In December Ms Nichols raised the plight of small breweries in the House of Commons.
She said breweries were being hit by a number of issues, including the cost of grain - which often comes from Ukraine and the surrounding region - and the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on both their staff and their customers, and skyrocketing energy prices.
"The total of all of those things together, coming off the back of the pandemic where of course their order books had really been hit, has just meant that the sector is in a real crisis at the moment," said Ms Nichols.
"They're getting it not only from their manufacturing costs but also those struggles hospitality businesses are facing, as consumers have less money in their pockets."
Manchester-based beer writer Matthew Curtis agreed the UK's once buoyant beer industry was really struggling, with "very few breweries opening".
Mr Curtis said there could be as many as 200 or 300 brewery closures in 2023, with four or five having closed every week since the start of the year.
"Without support, we're going to see a lot of businesses close and every one one of those is a dream ending and jobs lost, which is sad to see."
A government spokesperson said ministers would "always be on the side of small business, including breweries. This is why we are providing them and other non-domestic energy users with an unprecedented £18bn package of support this winter.
"In addition to energy bills support, we are also backing businesses with a £13.6bn business rates package, a £2.4bn fuel duty cut and a six-month extension to the alcohol duty freeze."

1675516320923.png
 
Well. We'll just have to brew our own then, innit.
Brewing grain doesn't come from the Ukraine and surrounding regions. It comes from England, mainly, Scotland, too. Can't move for the stuff in Ireland. So why is he blaming Ukraine. Energy, post-covid, yes, but both of those are improving.
 
Well. We'll just have to brew our own then, innit.
Brewing grain doesn't come from the Ukraine and surrounding regions. It comes from England, mainly, Scotland, too. Can't move for the stuff in Ireland. So why is he blaming Ukraine. Energy, post-covid, yes, but both of those are improving.

The article is badly written. Worldwide grain prices pushed up because of how important Ukraine is. Indirect impact.
 
It may be badly written but the fact is if the prices keep rising 200 - 300 breweries could close this year.

"They're getting it not only from their manufacturing costs but also those struggles hospitality businesses are facing, as consumers have less money in their pockets."
Manchester-based beer writer Matthew Curtis agreed the UK's once buoyant beer industry was really struggling, with "very few breweries opening".
Mr Curtis said there could be as many as 200 or 300 brewery closures in 2023, with four or five having closed every week since the start of the year.
"Without support, we're going to see a lot of businesses close and every one one of those is a dream ending and jobs lost, which is sad to see."
 
It may be badly written but the fact is if the prices keep rising 200 - 300 breweries could close this year

I think you missed the point of my post. The point I was making was pretty much what you posted. We may not buy grain for beer from Ukraine (as the article makes it sound like), but the knock-on effect for prices are still absolutely battering the industry. Unfortunately we're moving out of the golden age of brewing as a result.
 
My view it is all smoke and mirrors, jumping on the band wagon come's to mind, if grain for brewing do'es not come from Ukraine, they are taking the piss and using the war to bump up their prices
 
My view it is all smoke and mirrors, jumping on the band wagon come's to mind, if grain for brewing do'es not come from Ukraine, they are taking the **** and using the war to bump up their prices

It's not quite as simple as that. If the African market can't get their wheat from Ukraine, guess what farmers in the rest of Europe will plant instead of Barley? Scarcity=increase in price.

It's basic supply and demand, coupled with increased energy and transportation costs. No conspiracy.
 
Odd that the British government seems to get away with using the war in Ukraine as an argument for poor economic performance, whilst a country like Germany, which is far more reliant on Russian energy and Ukranian produce, can't.
 
Back
Top