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Neues von Castle Malting in Zusammenarbeit mit e-malt.com German
14 June, 2023



Brewing news World: Beer market remains in growth mode in 2022 with 40 biggest brewers increasing total output

The international beer market remained in growth mode in 2022: the total output volume of the 40 biggest brewers worldwide rose by 4.1 percent to roughly 1.67 billion hectolitres, BarthHaas reported on June 13.

Growth was not evenly divided among all companies, however: the overall picture is dominated by rising output at the big breweries, but many regional brewers found it difficult to make up for the volume losses sustained during the pandemic.

The high proportion of brewing groups leading the rankings is particularly striking: the top four alone – AB InBev, Heineken, China Resources Snow Breweries, and Carlsberg – together account for 60 percent of the total output of the top 40 brewers. Each of them has a sales volume in the hundreds of millions of hectolitres. AB InBev led the competition by a wide margin, taking first place with 518 million hectolitres (31 percent).

In the craft beer segment, consolidation continued. Japan’s Sapporo Breweries (ranked #27) acquired Stone Brewing Co. in the USA in order to consolidate its presence on the American continent. The American Canarchy Group was taken over by the beverage maker Monster.

Heineken now holds majority shares in United Breweries Group, India, whose output volume is thus consolidated in the group’s total, as well as in Grupa Zywiec, Poland, and Namibia Breweries. The integration of United Breweries paved the way for Venezuela’s Polar to return to the Top 40. Diageo (#14) sold the Ethiopian Meta Abo Brewery to BGI/Groupe Castel (#8). The Danish company Royal Unibrew (#35) acquired a majority shareholding in Norway’s Hansa Borg. A new entrant to the Top 40 was the Belgian brewer Martens; it replaced the German brewer Veltins which just missed out on a placing.

In the meantime, there have been no changes in the big groups’ Russian business. In spring 2022, Heineken, Carlsberg and AB InBev had announced that they would exit their operations because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but this has not proved possible thus far. The efforts of Japanese company Kirin (#13) to dispose of its shareholding in Myanmar Breweries Ltd., on the other hand, were successful.





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