Burton Mail

Brewery support needed

- By STEPHEN SINFIELD stephen.sinfield@reachplc.com @Mailrememb­ers

SMALL independen­t brewers have called on Chancellor Rishi Sunak to pay his £5 million “bar tab” as businesses devastated by lockdown measures continue to struggle through the Covid crisis.

A spokesman for the Society of Independen­t Brewers (SIBA) said: “Given the lack of Government support and expected new regional lockdown measures, brewers can no longer afford to pick up the Treasury’s tab.”

It’s estimated that five million pints of beer from small independen­t breweries were poured away during lockdown, and when pubs reopened in the summer many Global companies decided to replace beer for free, with small breweries expected by pubs to match the same deal.

With most small breweries only being able to reclaim the duty on the beer and then being expected to replace for free, brewers are now out of pocket by a whopping £5 million.

New measures could mean pubs are closed again, seeing hundreds of thousands of pints wasted once more.

Speculatio­n over the past week on the new measures announced yesterday already saw sales dry up while the Job Support Scheme announced last week only includes businesses legally closed – not small breweries when beer sales fall off a cliff.

The Society of Independen­t Brewers chairman Ian Fozard said: “Rishi’s bar bill is now well overdue and with new regional lockdowns being threatened, how many more million pints will have to be dumped before urgent financial support is implemente­d for small brewers – or will they be expected to pick up the tab again?

“Local brewers have struggled through the Covid crisis and haven’t received anywhere close to the support they need to survive. They had to pay for beer that ended up down the drain and were then expected to give free replacemen­ts; without help during another lockdown some will have little choice but to give up brewing for good.”

Small independen­t craft breweries have not received the same level of financial support as the wider hospitalit­y sector, including not having access to the Business Rates holiday, hospitalit­y grants, or the Government’s new Job Support Scheme, despite 80 per cent of their sales being lost when pubs were forced to close.

Even more worrying is that when pubs were able to reopen, sales during July were just 50 per cent of what small breweries would usually expect, leading to two small breweries a week closing over the summer.

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