National Post

Tariffs cause U.S. bourbon to vanish from Europe’s bars

- GERALD PORTER JR. WILLIAM MATHIS AND

Small U.S. bourbon producers are finding that European drinkers love their products. It’s those tariffs that don’t go down so smoothly.

Following the European Union’s June implementa­tion of a 25 per cent tariff on bourbon, the popular U.S. whiskey variety, the impact has been clear. One American producer said his exports have “dropped to zero” as a result.

Last year, they made up 15 per cent of revenue.

“Every U.K. buyer backed off,” said Paul Hletko, the owner of Evanston, Ill.-based Few Spirits. “They may want to buy it, but if they can’t sell it at the right price, that’s not doing us any favours.”

Small distillers cite the drought as proof their fears of a global trade war are coming to fruition.

Europe had been blossoming as a source of new revenue — but this market has been effectivel­y cut off for producers that lack the clout or brand recognitio­n of titans like Brown-Forman and Diageo. Now they’ve been sent back to square one.

The tariffs, which target U.S. goods such as Levi Strauss & Co. blue jeans and Harley-Davidson Inc. motorcycle­s, are the EU’s retaliatio­n to President Donald Trump’s duties on foreign steel and aluminum.

Hletko said the low six figures he’s made this year from internatio­nal orders all were booked before the tariffs’ imposition.

Meanwhile, Rob Cassell, the owner of Philadelph­iabased New Liberty Distillery, said European buyers have dissolved.

“Everybody shops by price,” Cassell said. “If your product before was 25 euros ($37.66) a bottle and all of a sudden it’s 35, but nothing’s changed, that’s not the same great buy for you that it was before.”

Spiros Malandraki­s, head of research at Euromonito­r, said the tariffs have stunted the growth of bourbon in Western Europe. Consumers will likely go to new whiskies from countries such as Canada or Sweden, or drink something else. ““It will be the smaller craft manufactur­ers that will start taking the biggest hits,” Malandraki­s said.

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