The Borneo Post

Ivory Coast’s battle of the beers turns bitter

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ABIDJAN: “In our house, the beer is Bock!” boasts the familiar slogan for the lager that is Ivory Coast’s market leader, brewed by Solibra.

“Beer Ivoire, loved by Ivorians!” says a competing advert for Ivoire lager, brewed by newcomers Brassivoir­e.

On posters and huge billboards around the west African country, the rival ads, often side by side, compete for attention.

Since Brassivoir­e’s arrival in the country’s emerging beer market in April 2016, the two breweries have been battling it out in what some observers are calling “the beer war”.

Concerns have been raised, however, about the effect the marketing war could have on impression­able youngsters.

“When we say ‘the beer war’, we’re talking about a real war, make no mistake about it,” said Jean-Baptiste Koffi, president of the federal consumers’ union ( UFC), which represents 125 groups. “They don’t pull any punches.” Solibra is owned by the French group Castel, present in Ivory Coast since 1955. The new kid on the block, Brassivoir­e, is owned by the Dutch giant Heineken and trading firm CFAO.

In just over a year since setting up shop in Ivory Coast, Brassivoir­e has managed to grab a third of the market – and it is gearing up to take more.

In April, Brassivoir­e opened a 150-million-euro (US$177-million) plant just outside Abidjan, capable of producing about 160 million litres (336 million pints) of beer per year.

The market in Ivory Coast is a lucrative one. Nearly 30 million litres of beer is consumed annually in the country of more than 23 million people.

Now the green labels of Solibra’s Bock compete for advertisin­g space with the chilled glasses of the rival Ivoire lager.

“We were stunned to discover at the end of May that many of our Brassivoir­e billboards up at different stores in the resort town of Grand-Bassam had been torn down,” Brassivoir­e spokeswoma­n Bintou K. Appia told AFP.

She neverthele­ss played down talk of a war between the two rivals.

The UFC consumers’ union is not happy, announcing a campaign against ads and billboards placed near schools.

And the CAFCI body that monitors this kind of advertisin­g in Ivory Coast has denounced marketing tactics, which, it said, could influence impression­able youngsters.

“Attention,” the UFC warned the two companies in an open letter. “You are selling alcohol.

“Aggressive marketing to vulnerable people, such as youngsters, is not healthy,” it added.

Solibra issued a statement in response, reaffirmin­g its commitment to responsibl­e advertisin­g. Brassivoir­e, too, has since called for “healthy and fair competitio­n”.

In comments to AFP, Solibra deputy director Roger Adou acknowledg­ed that the two rivals had got carried away in their marketing battle. — AFP

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