Dayton Daily News

Cra beer impacts farm production

Growing demand prompts rush to increase production.

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Hops growers in the U.S. are thriving and rushing to increase production as demand grows,

These are good times for growers like Ben St. Mary. He stood at his family’s farm in Washington state recently and watched as employees built trellises where a new field of hops, the key ingredient in the flavoring of beer, will grow.

“We’re riding a pretty good wave right now,” said St. Mary, whose Blackstar Ranch grows hops on 670 acres. “The whole craft beer thing is great.”

Hops are in short supply because of the dramatic increase in the popularity of craft breweries. That has growers in the Yakima Valley, which produces 75 percent of the nation’s hops, rushing to expand their production.

Hops are cone-shaped plants that are added to beer during the brewing process to add bitterness and flavoring. In Washington, acreage grew more than 6 percent in 2014 from the year before, and is projected to rise 10 percent this year, industry officials said.

Craft beers typically use four to five times more hops in the brewing process than blander mass-produced beers. The steady rise in the popularity of craft beers in recent years caught the hops industry, which had been in a slump, by surprise.

St. Mary understand­s that brewers are worried about getting the hops they need. “It’s caught them off guard,” he said. Last year, Blackstar Ranch added 35 acres of hops and this year they are putting in 45 more acres, St. Mary said.

Mitch Steele, brewmaster for Stone Brewing Co. in Escondido, California, agreed that “hop usage is outpacing supply.” Stone Brewing, one of the nation’s largest craft breweries, typically contracts several years out for its hops.

“When beer volume projection­s change, we get into trouble with some varieties,” Steele said. So far, Stone Brewing has been able to buy or trade for the hops it needs, he said.

But some brewers have had to curtail production because of the shortage, he said. It’s not just the hops plants that are in short supply, Steele said. More processing facilities that dry and bale the plant are also needed, he said.

Tomme Arthur, chief operating officer of The Lost Abbey in San Marcos, California said their solution is to contract for more hops than they need.

“For the past three years, we have sold off our surplus to friends and other brewers in need,” Arthur said. But they will likely quit doing that as the brewery is expecting growth of some 20 percent per year, he said.

Paul Gatza, director of the Brewers Associatio­n, a Boulder, Colorado-based group that represents 2,500 craft brewers, said prices for hops are climbing as the supply remains tight. The group has a goal of 20 percent of market share belonging to craft brewers by 2020, up from 11 percent now, he said.

To grow hops, farmers must build 18-foot tall trellis systems that the plants climb as they grow. It costs $8,000 to $10,000 an acre, and the crop is highly labor intensive.

Hops are not widely grown. The Yakima Valley, for instance, grows 25 percent of the world’s supply. Oregon and Idaho are the other big hop producers in this country. Overseas, Germany and the Czech Republic grow hops.

 ?? NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS / AP ?? Farm workers hang twine from the trellis of a new hop field in Moxee, Washington. Growth in production of craft beer across the U.S. has led to a big growth in the production of hops.
NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS / AP Farm workers hang twine from the trellis of a new hop field in Moxee, Washington. Growth in production of craft beer across the U.S. has led to a big growth in the production of hops.

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