Edmonton Journal

Alberta distillery to stop making four-litre bottles

Minister threatens to intervene after criticizin­g discount price of bulk vodka

- LISA JOHNSON

A distillery is halting production of discount four-litre vodka jugs after the Alberta minister responsibl­e for the province's liquor industry called out the product for not being responsibl­y priced.

T-Rex Distillery says public response has been mixed since photos of the jugs began circulatin­g on social media, with about half praising the jugs for “innovation and convenienc­e.”

Others expressed concern, including Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally, who says the low $49.95 price was “not very responsibl­e” and that he was looking at intervenin­g.

The Edmonton-area distillery says the jugs are a private-label product produced and bottled for a customer, Super Value Liquor, at its requested price.

Under current rules, Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis sets the wholesale price retailers must pay to purchase products, but T-Rex says there are no rules or guidelines provided by the agency as to how a product should be priced on shelves.

Federal laws regulate alcohol labelling and packaging across Canada, and Nally says the jugs are in compliance.

“What it's not in compliance with is the spirit of Albertans,” he told reporters Monday. “We believe in responsibl­e pricing, and that's where I think it goes afoul.”

Nally's ministry did not immediatel­y clarify what specific steps the government might take on pricing.

The plastic jugs, which are similar to four-litre milk containers, have plain labels with the words “value” and “vodka” over a yellow background.

Sunny Bhullar, manager at Edmonton Super Value Liquor, said his store discounted the jugs down from $60.

“We make sure we are serving our customers in a responsibl­e way,” said Bhullar in an interview.

He said the store aims to provide quality products for consumers looking to buy bulk and save money.

“Our marketing approach is we sell at a fair price,” he said. Should Nally introduce minimum prices or a floor price, Bhullar said he would be concerned.

“In that scenario, it will be hard for independen­t stores to compete with the bigger chains,” he said.

T-Rex said in an email that its vodka jugs have been for sale for about a year. It also offers a T-Rex-branded version of the jug, primarily for wholesale purposes, such as for bars and restaurant­s.

The company said the vodka jugs were reviewed and approved by Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis and, as of Monday, T-Rex had not received any communicat­ions from the agency, the government or the minister.

“Albertan craft distilleri­es have suffered from a lack of responsibl­e pricing for a while now and, in fact, there are multiple distilleri­es out there that are selling their spirits even cheaper than T-Rex,” the company said.

“We have often voiced our concerns with the current system to AGLC.”

Nally made his comment before introducin­g an omnibus red-tape reduction bill that he said would clarify he has authority to set liquor prices.

Nally added, “If this bill passes, then this is exactly the type of thing that I will look into.

“I don't think a four-litre plastic jug of vodka adds to the quality of the distillery industry that we have in this province. I don't think that it is responsibl­e pricing.”

I don't think a four-litre plastic jug of vodka adds to the quality of the distillery industry that we have in this province.

 ?? JASON FRANSON/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sunny Bhullar, co-owner of Super Value Liquor, displays four-litre jugs of vodka on Tuesday. He says any attempt by the government to regulate retail prices of alcohol would leave small operations like his vulnerable to bigger chains.
JASON FRANSON/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Sunny Bhullar, co-owner of Super Value Liquor, displays four-litre jugs of vodka on Tuesday. He says any attempt by the government to regulate retail prices of alcohol would leave small operations like his vulnerable to bigger chains.

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