close
MENU
Hot Topic Rich List
Hot Topic Rich List
1 mins to read

Small NZ craft breweries sold beer faster than they could make it in 2016, report finds

Smaller operations accounted for 10% of the value of New Zealand's beer consumption in 2016.

Paul McBeth
Wed, 09 Aug 2017

New Zealand's growing number of boutique craft breweries sold beer faster than they produced it in 2016 and now account for more than a tenth of the country's beer market, an ANZ Bank New Zealand industry specific report shows.

Of the 194 craft breweries in New Zealand, about 130 were deemed to be small operations in the annual ANZ industry insight report, up from 111 minnows a year earlier. Those smaller operations accounted for 10 percent of the value of New Zealand's beer consumption in 2016, up from 8.5 percent in 2015, and accounted for 5.7 percent of total consumer by volume, also higher at 4.9 percent. Smaller breweries boosted production 22 percent in the year while boosting revenue 32 percent, with the pace of growth slowing on both measures from 28 percent and 39 percent respectively in 2015.

"Small breweries have become a big business. New brands are appearing all the time and together the industry is changing the way many New Zealanders think about and consume beer," ANZ central region commercial & agri general manager John Bennett said in a statement. "I am confident we will continue to see growth, but brewers need to be smart about how they sell their product - it is about more than just good beer."

The growing demand for craft beer has seen the country's dominant brewers - Kirin-owned Lion (Beer, Spirits and Wine) New Zealand and Heineken's DB Breweries - raid their boutique rivals, most recently with DB's purchase of Tuatara Brewing Co and Lion's $25 million Panhead acquisition. Last week Lion said Panhead's first-half production was up 76 percent, continuing what it described as an "impressive growth trajectory," and the trebling of brewing capacity paved the way for expansion in both domestic and international markets.

ANZ's Bennett said exporting craft beer still challenged the wider industry, staying static at about 10 percent of production. The report said while it offered the opportunity to grow "exponentially", it also needed "a big investment of time and resources".

(BusinessDesk)

Paul McBeth
Wed, 09 Aug 2017
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.

Free News Alerts

Sign up to get the latest stories and insights delivered to your inbox – free, every day.

I’m already subscribed/joined

Free News Alerts

Sign up to get the latest stories and insights delivered to your inbox – free, every day.

I’m already subscribed/joined
Small NZ craft breweries sold beer faster than they could make it in 2016, report finds
69140
false