Brewers Association Names ``Tiger'' Brewers; Industry Shows Strength with Many Fast-Growing Players.BOULDER, Colo. -- The Brewers Association today announced its "Tiger List" for 2005: the top 10 craft brewers ranked by a combination of size and 2004 growth percentage. "Displaying aggressive growth, the entire craft beer industry shows the traits of a tiger right now," said Charlie Papazian Charles N. "Charlie" Papazian is a former nuclear engineer who founded the Association of Brewers and wrote The Complete Joy of Homebrewing. Brewing associations , President of the Brewers Association. "Nationwide, we have strong craft beer brands that show impressive growth performance." Each year the Brewers Association collects volume sales information from the country's 1,400 craft brewers to assess and track the progress of the craft beer segment. In 2004, the overall segment grew by 7.2 percent and the Tiger List shows why. "We put together the Tiger List by assessing both brewery size and 2004 growth percentage," said Ray Daniels William Raymond "Ray" Daniel (November 2 1928 – November 6 1997) was a Welsh football player and manager. Daniel was born in Swansea and started out at his local club Swansea Town as an amateur. , Director of Craft Beer Marketing at the Brewers Association. "These ten have the best combined rank on those two criteria." The term "tiger" was commonly used to describe the rapidly growing economies of seven Asian countries Noun 1. Asian country - any one of the nations occupying the Asian continent Asian nation country, land, state - the territory occupied by a nation; "he returned to the land of his birth"; "he visited several European countries" during the 1990s. "Given the relative size of these brewers in the overall beer industry and their aggressive growth, we felt the analogy was a good one," says Daniels. 2005 Brewers Association Tiger List Top ten brewing companies based on an index of size and growth performance. (Some companies operate multiple breweries.) 1. Widmer Brothers Brewing Co (OR) 2. Pyramid Breweries (WA) 3. New Belgium New Belgium can refer to:
4. Boulevard Brewing Co (MO) 5. Deschutes Brewery Gary Fish established the Deschutes Brewery & Public House as small brew pub in 1988 in downtown Bend, Oregon and named it after the wild & scenic Deschutes River. The brewery expanded in 1993 and now has a brewing facility with two brew houses so it can brew enough beer to (OR) 6. Kalamazoo Brewing Co (MI) 7. Magic Hat Brewing Co (VT) 8. Harpoon Brewery Harpoon Brewery is an American microbrewery, with plants in Boston, Massachusetts and Windsor, Vermont. Founded in 1986, the brewery was the first company to obtain a permit to manufacture and sell alcohol in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in over 25 years. (MA) 9. Rogue Ales Rogue Ales is an American craft brewery founded in 1988 in Ashland, Oregon when co-founders Jack Joyce, Rob Strasser and Bob Woodell opened their first brewpub.[1] (OR) 10. Kona Brewery LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol. LLC - Logical Link Control (HI) These ten brewers averaged 115,000 barrels (1.5 million cases) in sales during 2004 for a total of 1.15 million barrels (15.7 million cases). The average growth rate for these ten was 28 percent with total volume growth of 21 percent in aggregate. Size was based on reported 2004 sales barrelage and growth was based on the percent change in sales barrelage from 2003 to 2004. "Few industries today can boast a list of established players with this sort of growth record," said Paul Gatza, Director of the Brewers Association. "And while this list includes just ten brewing companies, the trend extends to all portions of the craft beer business." "These ten exemplify ex·em·pli·fy tr.v. ex·em·pli·fied, ex·em·pli·fy·ing, ex·em·pli·fies 1. a. To illustrate by example: exemplify an argument. b. the current trend in the industry where established brands continue to grow at impressive rates as good beer becomes a regular part of the American lifestyle." said Daniels. "That propelled the growth of the entire segment by 7.2 percent in 2004." The Brewers Association estimates 2004 sales by all craft brewers at 6,590,763 31-gallon barrels up from 6,150,497 barrels in 2003, an increase of 440,266 barrels or 6.0 million case-equivalents. By contrast, spirits volume increased at 3.1 percent for the year and wine volume was up 2.7 percent. The import and mass-market segments of the beer industry rose approximately 1.4 percent and 0.5 percent in volume respectively in 2004. The craft beer segment includes more than 1,400 breweries who produce primarily all-malt beers. It includes brewpubs (brewery/restaurant), microbreweries (less than 15,000 barrels per year) and specialty brewers. The association has tabulated industry growth data for these breweries annually since 1985. |
|
||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion