Organic Beer Sales Grow - Greenies May Be Right
UK supermarkets say demand for organic beer made from
organically grown New
Zealand hops has grown amid
deepening public concern over food safety and
the
environmental impact of modern farming. John Howard
reports.
The "greenies" might be right, 1998 sales of
organic food have grown in the
UK to around $NZ one
billion from $NZ 200 million in 1993 and retailers
are
keen to translate that success into the beer
market.
Glenn Payne, category buying manager for Safeway,
one of Britains biggest
four supermarket chains says, " I
think we'll see more and more brands which
will have
organic as a selling point."
Saving the world might be the
last thing on most people's minds when they
reach for a
beer but growing numbers of Britons are unwinding with a
glass
of foaming brown froth wafting with a sharp tang
resembling overripe
bananas.
Organic beer looks like
any other beverage as it ferments in vats but,
according
to Graham Auton marketing manager for the Samuel Smith
Brewery,
the big difference is the New Zealand
organically grown hops that can push
the retail price up
5 percent or higher.
"People drink it who care about the
environment and are prepared to pay that
little bit more
for quality, he said.
Supermarkets say newspaper stories
of safety scares over genetically
modified crops, which
have dominated world headlines this year, have
fueled
demand for organic food, perceived as being free
from harmful pesticides and
kind to the planet.
The
fashionable Islington area pub, Duke of Cambridge, sells the
organic
beer charging 50 percent more for its Freedom
organic pints than many other
pubs charge for normal
beer.
Co-owners Geetie Singh and Esther Boulter say their
pub has been so
successful that they plan to establish
more like it to reach untapped
consumers who would buy
organic beer if it were more widely available.
While most
of the great beer-drinking public in the UK are still
interested
in the so-called "normal beer sales of organic
beer, like organic food, is
increasing.
There's also a
growing number of schools in Britain and the United
States
who now insist their pupils eat only organic
lunches.
Sales or organically grown New Zealand hops is
fine - but why aren't we
making and selling the organic
beer as well. There's a Scoop idea
for
someone.
Feedback from Scoop reader: "Emerson's Brewery in Dunedin makes an organic beer. Its a pilsener called Pride of the Plains." Scoop's resident beer aficionado advises that it is also delicious.
ENDS