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CASTLE MALTING NEWS in partnership with www.e-malt.com Korean
14 September, 2019



Brewing news The Czech Republic: Good summer for Czech brewing industry

Czech breweries seem to have had a good summer. July sales were up 2% compared to last year’s record, with over 33,000 more hectolitres more beer produced than at the same time last year. Exports helped to drive the figures, as well as moderate weather, Expats.cz reported on September 14.

When it is too cold, people drink less, and when it is too warm they turn to lighter beverages such as radlers and soft drinks. Full statistics for the summer will be available at the end of September, according to the Czech Union of Breweries and Malthouses (ČSPS).

And while most people’s focus is now on wine festivals, beer will be celebrated in pubs across Prague and rest of the Czech Republic on Czech Beer Days (Dní českého piva), held on September 24–30, which coincides with St Wenceslas Day on September 28. He is considered the patron of beer.

The idea behind the celebration is to get people back into pubs for the social aspect of drinking.

Compared to last year, more beer is being consumed in pubs and at home, while restaurants are losing their share. But overall, more than 60 percent of all Czech beer consumption takes place at home.

Light-colored beer still dominates production, while dark and semi-dark beers make up less than 4 percent of the market.

Demand for beer in plastic (PET) bottles fell by 13.5% percent compared to last July. “Breweries try to behave in an environmentally friendly way, and they limit them,” ČSPS Executive Director Martina Ferencová said at a press conference.

Sales of beer in glass bottles was up 2.5%, and sales in kegs was up 3%. Interest in mini-kegs, popular last season, turned out to be a fad. Sales dropped some 40% compared to last year. Consumers may have switched to larger barrels. “Breweries do not only offer 50 litre kegs, but also 30 litre and 15 litre kegs,” Ferencová said.

Interest in cans is also on the rise. “The package is convenient, it cools quickly, it is not heavy, and it does not have to be returned,” Ferencová said. People often buy beer in cans for traveling. “We found that more than a third of cans end up abroad,” she said.

Consumers are also being more responsible, and the older hard-drinking generation is dying out. “Drinkers who drank their 10 beers daily do not exist anymore. Most people enjoy beer in a reasonable degree,” Ferencová added.

Another current trend is increased interest in lagers (11°–12.99°) at the expense of weaker draft beers (8°–10.99°). Degrees mark the amount of malt sugar in the brewing process, and are not to be confused with percentage of alcohol content. Higher degree beers do have higher alcohol, though. A 10° beer is on average 4% alcohol and a 12° beer is closer to 5%. There is also increased interest in non-alcoholic beers.

According to the Czech Statistical Office (ČSÚ), in 1927 beer production in the then-Czechoslovakia was 10 million hectolitres. The average consumption per person then was 105.8 litres of beer. Last year, total production exceeded 21 million hectolitres, while the average Czech, including children, drank 144.3 litres of beer, which is the highest consumption in the world. Czechs are also among the largest consumers of alcohol overall and largest spenders.





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