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  • 2011-04-06 (xsd:date)
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  • State Rep. Mike Villarreal says craft beer is the only segment of the beer market that's growing (en)
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  • Plugging legislation that would allow restaurants that brew their own beer to sell their bottled suds to a beer distributor, state Rep. Mike Villarreal suggested craft brewers are the future of the beer industry. The only segment in the beer market that is growing is the craft beer segment, the San Antonio Democrat said during a March 22 press conference about House Bill 660, which was left pending in a House committee. Responding to our query, Peter Clark, Villarreal’s legislative director, passed on a March 21 press release from the Colorado-based Brewers Association, a trade association representing craft brewers. The association defines a craft brewer as small (produces less than 6 million barrels a year), independent (less than 25 percent is owned by an alcoholic beverage industry member who isn’t a craft brewer) and traditional (at least 50 percent of its total production volume is malt beer or beer that enhances the flavor with grains such as barley or wheat). According to the release, small and independent craft brewers saw production increase 11 percent and retail sales increase 12 percent in 2010. But total U.S. beer sales were down 2.2 percent in 2009 and 1 percent in 2010. Total beer volume dropped from 205.7 million barrels in 2009 to 203.6 million in 2010, the release says. The National Beer Wholesalers Association, which represents 3,300 licensed independent U.S. beer distributors issued a press release the following day applauding craft brewers’ continued growth. Harry Schuhmacher, editor of Beer Business Daily, a trade publication focused on the commercial beer industry, told us that Villarreal’s claim is definitely true. He likewise cited the Brewers Association, which he said tracks craft beer volumes, and the Washington-based Beer Institute, a lobbying group that tracks the entire industry. The Beer Institute pointed us to statistics showing that total estimated domestic beer production decreased 1.6 percent from 2009-10. Craft beer has really taken on a life of its own in the last four or five years, Schuhmacher said. And the beer industry itself has always grown until 2008, when the recession hit, he said. Ironically, craft beer, which is the highest-priced segment in the beer industry, continued to grow and indeed accelerate. Texas has followed the nationwide trends tracked by the Brewers Association and the Beer Institute, said Rick Donley, president of the Texas Beer Alliance, which supports Villarreal’s bill. The only thing that has a real growth to it right now is the craft beer segment, he said. The Wholesale Beer Distributors of Texas, which opposes the legislation, didn’t respond to our query. The sales trend in microbrews hasn’t been lost on the big brewers. On March 28, Anheuser-Busch announced plans to buy Chicago craft beermaker Goose Island. Sales of these more expensive and more sophisticated craft beers are a tiny drop in the bucket compared to mass market beer sales, but they’re growing faster than mainstream beers, according to a National Public radio story about the deal. Last September, CNBC reported that publicly-traded craft beer companies had seen explosive growth in the U.S. while overall beer sales were down. And an August MarketWatch report said: While beer consumption in recent quarters has remained mostly anemic for the major commercial beer brewers... sales for premium or so-called craft beers have continued at a steady pace. We rate Villarreal’s statement as True. (en)
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