The number of breweries in Canada has risen from 10 in 1985,
which were owned by three companies, to over 640 in 2015 with the majority
considered microbreweries. Craft beer sales also have risen tenfold in the last
decade, but small breweries face barriers to growth
TORONTO ON—Not only was beer a passion for Bob and Doug
McKenzie, popular members of the Second City comedy troupe during the 1980s, it
was also a unit of measurement for the Canadian duo.
The number of brown stubby bottles of Molson Canadian or
Labatts Blue they quaffed was the yardstick used to assess qualities ranging
from the length of time to the value of a good.
Beer was a relatively homogeneous product back then, making
it possible for one stubby bottle to serve as the unit of measure as easily as
any other. What would the beer-guzzling hosers make of “beer” today as craft
brews take off, eh?
As it has in other countries, the beer market has changed
considerably with the decline of mass-marketed, light-bodied lager beer such as
Canadian and Blue and the rise of craft beers differentiated by a number of
attributes from taste to location.
But what exactly is a craft beer? Is the brewer small and/or
local? Does the beer itself incorporate more specialty hops or innovative
ingredients such as fruit and spices?
While there is no pan-Canadian definition, the Ontario Craft
Brewers Association defines craft beer as being small (less than 400,000
hectolitres), independent, and traditional.
The Brewers Association in the United States defines a craft
brewer as producing less than six million barrels (around seven million
hectolitres) annually, being less than 25 per cent owned by a non-craft brewery
and using traditional or innovative ingredients for the majority of their
production.
Many beers that were initially produced by local craft
brewers have since been purchased by larger, multi-national breweries and are
now available in a much wider geographic area thanks to the distribution
network of those large larger breweries. Does that mean the beer is still a
craft beer?
At the peak of the McKenzie brothers’ popularity in 1985,
there were only 10 breweries in Canada ,
and three companies owned those 10 breweries.
From 120 breweries to 10
The consolidation from 120 brewers after Prohibition to the
10 in 1985 was the culmination of a 60-year trend driven by government
regulations and economies of size associated with improvements in brewing and
transportation technology.
The trend toward homogenization and consolidation in beer
production was reversed in the 1980s with the beginning of the global “Real
Beer movement.”
The sales of craft beer have risen tenfold in the last
decade and it now accounts for six per cent of the market. Government
incentives and consumer demand for locally anchored food experiences have
fostered this growth in Canada
and globally.
The current production of approximately 20 million
hectolitres of beer in Canada
is close to 1985 levels but more than 700 breweries are now brewing it.
The trend toward more breweries has accelerated recently
with the numbers nearly doubling over the last five years, and the growth
coming almost exclusively from those firms producing less than 50,000
hectolitres, which now represent over 95 per cent of all breweries in Canada .
Two extremes
The number of large brewers has also grown, but there has
been a hollowing out of the middle—there are no longer any medium-sized
breweries that produce between 50,000 and 75,000 hectolitres of beer.
The evolution of Canadian beer production into the two
extremes of the size distribution parallels the situation in the United States .
Craft beer production has grown dramatically in the U.S. , expanding from roughly five
million barrels in 2004 to nearly 25 million in 2016.
This production comes from more than 6,000 craft breweries,
and the vast majority are small craft breweries with limited distribution.
The difference between the U.S.
and Canadian market is the existence of large, regional craft breweries; the
three largest craft brewers account for approximately one-quarter of all craft
beer produced in the United
States
However, these are precisely the type of breweries that have
been targeted by multinationals for acquisition, e.g., Ballast Point by
Constellation Brands and Lagunitas by Heineken.
Regulations stem from temperance era
The Canadian craft beer sector may grow to become like the U.S. where, as
breweries grow, they face the threat of acquisition. But it’s unlikely that
Canadian craft breweries will grow significantly to become attractive for such
a buyout.
Canadian regulations on the sale of alcohol stemming from
the temperance movement at the beginning of the last century have limited the
opportunities for microbreweries to sell outside their locations other than
through local bars and restaurants.
Policies that impose lower taxation rates on smaller
breweries provide a further disincentive for growth beyond a certain size in
most Canadian jurisdictions.
Production costs associated with distribution and supply
issues complicated by the distance between population centres in Canada have
also constrained the size of new breweries.
While we have seen some acquisition, purchasing small
Canadian craft breweries unproven outside of their local domain could be highly
risky for large multinationals.
The resulting evolution of Canadian beer production into
either small or large brewers is consistent with the change happening in many
other agri-food sectors.
There is a “valley of death” for mid-size producers too
large to capture local demand premiums and too small to achieve economies of
size in production and distribution.
by Alfons Weersink, Professor, Dept of Food,
Agricultural and Resource Economics
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