Industry News       English French Dutch Spanish German Russian Italian Portuguese Portuguese Danish Greek Romanian Ukrainean Chinese Polish Korean
Logo Slogan_Spanish


CASTLE MALTING NEWS en colaboración con www.e-malt.com Spanish
14 September, 2017



Brewing news Australia: Craft beer drinkers want designated craft beer seal

Producing a folksy brew is not enough for Australian craft beer drinkers: it must also come from an authentic, independent brewery, FoodNavigator-Asia.com reported on September 13.

That's according to the biggest publicly available survey of tastes in craft beer Down Under, which took into account the opinions of 17,000 consumers.

It found that 64% of craft aficionados wanted to know a brewery's ownership, while 99% said they preferred to buy their beer from and independent, Australian-owned brewery.

In comparison just a quarter were happy to buy craft beer from a large multi-national company and a third from supermarket-owned brands.

The 2017 Australian Craft Beer Survey, by craft retailer Beer Cartel, also showed strong interest for a seal to identify whether a beer is from an independent Australian brewery, with eight out of 10 respondents indicating that such a device would have a medium to large impact on the beer they purchase.

The A740 mln (UD$594 mln) craft beer segment is the only part of the Australian beer market which is in continuous growth, with overall consumption of beer in decline.

Indeed, industry researcher IBISWorld estimates craft production has been growing at an annual rate of nearly 10%.

Consumed by 92% of craft beer drinkers Australia-wide, Pale Ale reigns as the most popular craft beer style, the Beer Cartel survey found.

Pirate Life was voted Australia’s best craft brewery, ahead of Feral Brewing, which took the top position in last year’s study.

“Ownership appears to matter because it is part of the story that is unique to each individual craft brewery. It is part of the brewery's heritage; being owned by real people, rather than a corporate giant,” the report said.

When it comes to craft beer brands produced for large supermarket-owned bottleshops like Dan Murphy’s and First Choice, just 32% of respondents were happy to buy these. Likewise, only 23% were happy to buy brews produced by Australia's multi-national corporations such as Lion and Carlton United.

Having tested opinions on whether a designated craft beer seal would inform beer choice, 82% of respondents said it would. Not long after the survey began, the American Brewers Association and the Society of Independent Brewers in the United Kingdom both released their own independent brewery seals.

“This reiterates drinkers’ willingness to buy beer from an 'Australian independent brewery' and a reluctance to buy beer from a supermarket brand or large corporation that is sold as 'craft beer',” Beer Cartel said.





Regresar



E-malt.com, la fuente de información global para los profesionales de la industria cervecera y de malteado. Los boletines quincenales de E-malt.com incluyen las últimas noticias de la industria, estadísticas en gráficos y tablas, precios mundiales de cebada y malta, y otra información relevante. Haga clic aquí para obtener acceso completo a E-malt.com. Si usted es un cliente de Castle Malting, puede obtener acceso gratuito al sitio web y publicaciones de E-malt.com. Contáctenos para obtener más información en marketing@castlemalting.com.














Utilizamos cookies para asegurarnos de brindarle la mejor experiencia en nuestro sitio web. Si continúa utilizando este sitio, asumiremos que está satisfecho con él.     Ok     No      Privacy Policy   





(libra 7.6113 sec.)