Edmonton Journal

German brewers cheer end to drop in drinking

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BERLIN / A steady slide in beer consumptio­n in Germany was stopped cold last year thanks to warmer weather, the federal statistics office said on Monday.

German brewers sold 98.2 million hectolitre­s of beer last year, down by just 0.1 per cent in 2011 after dropping by an average of two per cent every year since 2006. Beer consumptio­n in Germany had fallen in all but two of the last 10 years.

Despite Germany’s reputation as a nation of beer lovers, young people are turning away from the national beverage in favour of other non-alcoholic beverages, brewers say.

The warmer weather last year as well as the World Cup soccer tournament in 2006 helped to put a floor beneath what is still the country’s most famous beverage. Germans still drink more than 100 litres of beer per capita each year.

“Beer sales depend on the weather. In the first half of 2011 — in April and May — we had a lot of warm weather, and the figures were up by 1.0 per cent,” Juergen Hammer, an official at the Federal Statistics Agency, told Reuters.

“This is why this year’s results aren’t so bad. So I guess the old adage is true that when it’s warm people drink beer.”

Consumptio­n of German beer, which has been subject to a purity law since 1516, has been in slow decline for decades.

The World Cup football tournament helped German beer consumptio­n rise by 1.4 per cent in 2006, the strongest increase in 12 years, the federal statistics office said on Monday.

 ?? REUTERS, FILE ?? German brewers are thanking the warm weather for the rise in beer consumptio­n. In the first
half of last year, warmer temperatur­es gave way to a one per cent increase in sales.
REUTERS, FILE German brewers are thanking the warm weather for the rise in beer consumptio­n. In the first half of last year, warmer temperatur­es gave way to a one per cent increase in sales.

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