For all your beer-related news, updates, and just "I had a great beer last night" stories. There wasn't a thread (that I could find), and I had beer news, so here it is.
Regarding Craft Beer and what's been happening: Bitter battle between Big Beer and craft brewers gets uglier
Quite a good article by the CBC, covering both Canada and the USA, with a bit of who owns what in both countries. Basically, a number of places that used to be craft beer no longer are! Anheuser-Busch InBev has been buying up smaller places that are doing well, and they're not even the only ones doing it. That alone I don't have a problem with, but the "still marketing them as craft beers" seems a bit sketchy, especially at conventions/competitions.
Particularly concerning IMO is this though:
Regarding Craft Beer and what's been happening: Bitter battle between Big Beer and craft brewers gets uglier
Quite a good article by the CBC, covering both Canada and the USA, with a bit of who owns what in both countries. Basically, a number of places that used to be craft beer no longer are! Anheuser-Busch InBev has been buying up smaller places that are doing well, and they're not even the only ones doing it. That alone I don't have a problem with, but the "still marketing them as craft beers" seems a bit sketchy, especially at conventions/competitions.
Ya it's the same beer, but it's not the same business.Toronto's Summer Craft Beer Fest is on this week, featuring local, southern Ontario beers from craft brewers such as Redline Brewhouse in Barrie, Hometown Brewing of Nolfolk County, Barley Days Brewery in Prince Edward County, and Niagara's Oast House.
But alongside those microbreweries are names like Labatt's Mill Street, Creemore, owned by Molson Coors, and California's Lagunitas Brewing company, owned by Dutch giant Heineken NV.
Particularly concerning IMO is this though:
Buying up smaller guys? That can be fine, as long as it wasn't done via predatory practices. Buying up the review sites? Not cool."AB InBev has been buying out true indie craft breweries and then continuing to market them as if they're still true indie craft breweries." said Sam Calagione, founder of the popular Delaware craft brewery Dogfish Head Brewing, who believes the lack of transparency goes even further.
Last month Dogfish Head Brewing asked to have its beer removed from beer rating site RateBeer after word got out that ZX Ventures, backed by AB InBev, had bought a minority stake in the site last year.
"Once we found out about it we wanted nothing to do with RateBeer anymore even though our beers are very highly rated on there because we just thought it was a massive conflict of interest."