Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Shutdowns in pandemic hurt small breweries in Germany

- By Daniel Niemann

COLOGNE, Germany — Bars have been closed for more than three months, Carnival celebratio­ns are canceled, and it’s not clear when things will get better in Germany. That has left the boss of Brauerei Heller, an organic brewery in Cologne, thinking “from week to week” as she tries to chart a course out of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Official data released last week showed beer sales in Germany dropped 5.5% last year to 2.3 billion gallons, a decline fostered by lengthy shutdowns.

German bars and restaurant­s were closed from March until May, and have been shut again since the beginning of November as part of the country’s second lockdown. Major events and festivals where large amounts of beer would usually be consumed also have been canceled.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and the governors of Germany’s 16 states agreed late Wednesday to extend the current lockdown, which was due to expire Sunday, until at least March 7.

That’s a problem above all for Germany’s many small brewers. Marc-Oliver Huhnholz, the spokesman for the German Brewers’ Associatio­n, says the country has over 1,500 breweries, including more than 1,000 small ones “that are very strong in the catering industry. So they sell their beer in their bars and restaurant­s, and they are, of course, massively affected.”

One such case is Brauerei Heller, a nearly 30-year-old organic brewery with its own beer garden. “We’re getting through the pandemic from week to week,” CEO Anna Heller said.

Strong summer business followed Germany’s relatively short first lockdown, but when the winter started “everything was over again,” Heller said. The brewery is largely dependent on draft beer; only about 20% of its output is bottled beer, which doesn’t depend so much on open bars.

Heller says she has “no idea how far and how well we can carry on like this.” Revenues were down 40% on a normal year in 2020, “and without help we wouldn’t survive at all,” she said.

The German government has put together a series of aid packages for companies affected by the pandemic.

“We are producing now for the time afterward, because beer isn’t ready straight away,” said Heller, whose brewery produces some 105,000 gallons in a normal year and has 15 employees. “We have to plan, look to the future and produce ahead of time, but if things don’t go the way we hope, then we’ve produced for nothing and run up personnel costs.”

There’s little visibility right now on when bars and restaurant­s might reopen. Germany’s infection rates are gradually declining toward the government’s target level, and politician­s have vowed to open schools and childcare centers as the first priority.

Heller said she hopes for “clear figures” from political leaders on when bars and restaurant­s can reopen, and says it must be recognized that they can’t then close again after two weeks.

“That would break our necks,” she said.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER/AP ?? An employee at work Tuesday at Brauerei Heller in Cologne, Germany. Many of the country’s small breweries rely heavily on selling beer to bars and restaurant­s.
MARTIN MEISSNER/AP An employee at work Tuesday at Brauerei Heller in Cologne, Germany. Many of the country’s small breweries rely heavily on selling beer to bars and restaurant­s.

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