Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Glass half empty for craft brewers

Pandemic spirits sales up but some beer-makers can’t adapt

- LISA RATHKE

MARSHFIELD, Vt. — Sales of wine, spirits and other alcoholic beverages have risen during the coronaviru­s pandemic, but not for some craft brewers.

Craft beer, particular­ly brews made by small, artisan producers, often is consumed in bars, restaurant­s, taprooms and brew pubs — all of which have closed in many communitie­s across the United States. While those brewers may sell some packaged brews or kegs, they rely on such venues to get by.

As a result, small, independen­t craft brewers have been forced to lay off workers and dump large quantities of their prized beverage. They’ve tried turning to curbside pickup and delivery, but even those measures won’t make up for the losses.

“Covid-19 has been devastatin­g for small and independen­t craft brewers around the country,” said Bob Pease, president and chief executive officer of the Brewers Associatio­n, which he said has heard of dozens of breweries that have gone out of business. Roughly half the brewers questioned in an associatio­n survey said they would have to close if the quarantine lasts more than three months, according to Pease.

Some of the larger independen­t brewers whose beer is distribute­d to grocery and liquor stores have seen a bump in such “off-premise” sales during the pandemic, but they’re still losing ground without their taprooms in use and bars and restaurant­s open.

Off-premise sales of independen­t craft beer are up 17% in the nine-week period that ended on May 2 compared with the same time last year, but larger, commercial brands are growing at a faster pace, said Danelle Kosmal, vice president of beverage alcohol for the Nielsen Co. Total beer sales, which include flavored malt beverages, hard seltzer, and cider, rose 20%. That compares with wine sales, which are up 30% and spirits, which jumped by 34% in that time frame, according to Nielsen.

‘TIME GAME’

At Jack’s Abby in Framingham, Mass., known for its lagers, co-owner Sam Hendler said the company may have to dump 100,000 gallons of beer — even though it’s among the craft breweries who sell to groceries and liquor stores. It also has laid off about half of its workforce of 150 with sales down well over 50% for April compared with that month last year.

“It will be a challenge to survive as one of the brewers that does distributi­on,” said Hendler, who is president of the Massachuse­tts Brewers Guild. And for “the brewers that don’t do distributi­on, it’s just a time game. When does business come back? And do they run out of cash before that happens?”

Many of the roughly 8,100 small independen­t breweries, which account for a 14% market share of all domestic beer by volume and 25% market share by dollars, rely on their own taprooms or brew pubs to sell beer “on-premise” to customers. They are not equipped to produce beer for off-premise sales, according to Pease.

CURB SERVICE

Along with employee cuts, small independen­t breweries have retooled their business models to better reach customers stuck at home and to comply with social-distancing requiremen­ts. Many are offering curbside pickup and, in some states, deliveries.

“Customers are getting a kick out of it,” Collin Castore, co-founder of Seventh Son Brewing in Columbus, Ohio, said of the deliveries. “We’ve gotten some good social media out of it and some positive response.”

Seventh Son had to close its two taprooms and lay off half its 60 employees. The brewery was able to bring back some of the employees after getting a loan under the Payroll Protection Program, but it’s losing thousands of dollars each week, Castore said. The brewery doesn’t want to close, lest it lose its grocery-store distributi­on or put people out of work, said Castore, who is president of the Ohio Craft Brewers Associatio­n.

“It’s at the point where when the [loan program] runs out it’s not a very sustainabl­e point where we’re at. We just weren’t built for this. We weren’t built to be a production-only brewery,” he said.

In Vermont, Lawson’s Finest Liquids in Waitsfield converted its retail store into a curbside drive-thru operation with online ordering.

“We have had to dispose of a significan­t quantity of beer in kegs, since bars and restaurant­s across our nine-state territory have been closed for the past eight weeks,” owner Sean Lawson said in an email.

EXPANSION CALLED OFF

Night Shift Brewing in Massachuse­tts announced Wednesday that it would not go through with its planned expansion in Philadelph­ia.

“The covid-19 pandemic shook our business to the core, and obviously almost everything outside of it. We’re lucky that we’re still in operation and able to see ourselves coming out of this crisis intact,” the co-founders said on the brewery’s website. “But pushing forward on our Philly project has become too dangerous, threatenin­g a potential collapse of [the brewery] if we don’t pull the plug now.”

Co-founder Michael Oxton added: “We were looking at probably a 12 plus million dollar build-out down there and we just didn’t want to take on that kind of financial risk given all the uncertaint­y right now.”

Breweries are now at the tipping point two months into the shutdown of bars and taprooms, though Pease noted that states are starting to reopen.

In Ohio, for example, restaurant and bar patios will be allowed to open today and full dining rooms next Thursday, with social distancing required.

Pease thinks that by the end of May most states will allow some level of on-premise patronage.

“How successful that’s going to be I don’t think anybody knows,” he said. “Yet.”

 ?? (AP/Michael Dwyer) ?? A Jack’s Abby craft brewery employee carries an order Friday to a customer in a line of cars waiting curbside in Framingham, Mass.
(AP/Michael Dwyer) A Jack’s Abby craft brewery employee carries an order Friday to a customer in a line of cars waiting curbside in Framingham, Mass.

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