Saturday 1 July 2023

All hail Lord Lager!

The Morning Advertiser recently published some interesting statistics on beer sales in pubs, which showed that the market share of lager had reached a record 69.5%, or nearly seven out of ten of all pints sold. This was up from 65.8% six years ago. In fact, if you include “Pilsner”, which for some reason has its own separate category, lager reaches a full 70.5%.

The biggest loser over this period has been Bitter, which has fallen from 22.9% to 15.4%. Stout, which must be predominantly Guinness, has risen from 6.4% to 8.3%, while “Pale” has risen from 3.1% to 5.2%. I’d assume this includes cask pale ales like Wainwright and Sharp’s Atlantic as well as keg beers like Punk IPA and Neck Oil. It doesn’t split out a specific figure for cask, but obviously this can only be a subset of the 21% accounted for by Bitter, Pale and Mild, plus a sliver of the stout.

No doubt the usual beer snobs will attribute this trend to ordinary drinkers being brainwashed by the international brewers with glitzy advertising, but in reality it just reflects the UK increasingly aligning itself with all other major developed countries, where pale lager of some kind is the default beer. But it reflects a basic fact of life that brewers have to come to terms with.

Essentially, nearly 80% of the whole on-trade beer market is accounted for by lager and Guinness, leaving a mere 20% for everything else to pick over. My local CAMRA branch recently had a talk from Andy Slee, the new Chief Executive of SIBA, who made the point that most of the talk about beer on social media related to brands that made up less than 5% of the total market. He presented this as an opportunity, but surely it represents the reality of every market, that low-volume enthusiast products receive far more attention than mainstream ones.

This raises an issue for microbrewers. Most will have come in to the business motivated by their love of cask ale, and be geared up to produce that product, and possibly bottle a little bit of it. But they have to recognise that they are fishing in a diminishing pond. Some will be content with that, but the available market volume mostly lies in lager. This was question I asked in a Twitter poll:

It is true that lager requires more investment in processing and equipment than cask brewing, but in recent years there has been a huge expansion in the production of “craft keg” from smaller breweries, and this does not seem to struggle to find space on bars. So the barriers to entry argument doesn’t really apply.

Some new breweries have put a lot of emphasis on lager, although they have generally been snapped up by the multinationals. Camden Hells and Meantime London Lager spring to mind. But, almost by definition, in comparison with ales, it is harder to brew a lager with a highly distinctive flavour, and if you do it might be offputting to customers. So does lager represent a huge vein of opportunity, or a potential graveyard of ambition?

29 comments:

  1. In my experience brewing lager is an unforgiving business in which limitations of kit and expertise are readily exposed. Much more so than ale brewing of whatever ilk, especially if you want to produce a clear beer.

    Lager drinkers may well have a reputation for being less discerning than us real ale types, but in reality they want consistency and clarity. And, generally, brands they recognise.That's where the big boys come in. Volume is also key and if the smaller craft brewers produce unfined and unfiltered beer of doubtful quality, then by it's very nature it will be limiting and just cannibalise their other products on their own bars.

    No room at the inn for them in any meaningful way I'm afraid.

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    1. That is why English style golden ale was created correct me if I am wrong to compete with lager. They are crisper than regular pale ales and yes bitter is a pale ale along with the American style pale ales. They use pale lager malts at least in Sullivans Gold ale.
      Oscar

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  2. God no. Tarquin & Jasper ruined the bitter. Don't want them ruining lager. Craft lager tastes like it has dirt in it. Stick to industrial lager !

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    1. I believe that some small brewery lagers such as Joule's Green Monkey and Hawkshead Lakeland Lager are actually top-fermented "bastard lagers" along the lines of Einhorn rather than true lagers.

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    2. This is true. Many of the micros brewing ‘lager’ simply don’t have the tanks to brew a proper lager (in FVs for ( or 6 weeks). I know from experience of being involved with a dedicated lager brewery (Bohem) what’s involved and many other brewers don’t have the kit or the expertise to produce a true and decent lager.

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    3. Joules Green Monkey is a very poor imitation of real lager. Their cask beers are equally poor in taste and quality. The pubs are nice though.

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    4. The basic idea tends not to start with "most UK lager is a cheaper product than German or Czech based on either ingredient, method or lagering time, so lets make something bang on authentic that would pass muster over there. It would cost more but we could charge more for a better product" That could be a viable product. Niche but there would be a market for it. Not a mass market. Budvar would still be cheaper in Tesco, but you'd find customers. Whether you'd find enough to be viable? A few already exist. Freedom Brewery for example and they appear viable enough.

      It begins with "Lets make something that's a craft twist on lager. Lets use the "new" american hops or something to give a lager that craft beer taste" so you end up with a lighter version of a craft pale ale often using the equipment and methods of ale brewing as the product is not going to be that different anyway. It doesn't appeal to regular lager drinkers. It doesn't appeal to the snob end of authentic lager drinkers. Maybe it appeals to craft pale ale drinkers. We will see if it finds finds a new drinker looking for that kind of drink. That sort of beer is already in supermarkets. It's found a niche in the US market. In the UK, Lost Lager is a lager with a bit of craft taste. Dirty, imv, but appears popular enough. Brooklyn Lager is another. Lager with gak. Prefer a Krony, myself. But both are macro products and we'll see how long they last in the UK.

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    5. Which is why British style golden ale was created.
      Oscar

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    6. I wonder what caused the shift to lager in both Britain and Ireland.
      Oscar

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  3. Campaign For Big Breweries1 July 2023 at 16:45

    Bitter is dying because you CAMRAs turned it into a small batch inconsistent cottage industry product you couldn't trust. Now you want to ruin the lager too?

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    1. Size has nothing to do with consistency it is how the scientific method is applied.
      Oscar

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  4. I think if you go to the trouble of setting up a Brewery you need to stick to your guns. Many startups are hobby brewers content to some extent to see their products sold to the masses, if brewers have set up as a serious enterprise, they may consider diversifying to lager if they are sure the business case is sound. I don't often drink lager, when I do it is usually premium brands. With the best will in the world, small independent brewers are no going to get a look in on this market.

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  5. Cooking Lager Won1 July 2023 at 19:38

    Looking at the customers in my local pub, it's all premium lager. Not just the young ones, the middle aged blokes too. If Cooking Lagers jokey campaign was real it would be beating CAMRA hands down. Ale is just a drink for CAMRA enthusiasts these days.

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  6. I've just left a micro pub. 6 casks. The best value must have been the 660ml bottles of Madri at 4.90. People were drinking it in preference to the similarly priced pints of cask.

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  7. There's not much point in competing in pubs as the big brewers dominate marketing, price, distribution etc. The only one to make a significant presence (Camden Hells) was bought up by ABI and its continued success is largely down to it being part of a package of beers when pubs are securing a deal for a majority brewer.
    Draught independent lager is a mightly tough ask to get enough volume distributed to make it worthwhile. As mentioned by others, it's a much tougher style to brew as there's nowhere to hide if something isn't right.
    The only place it's worth competing is on the small pack market where there is a small chance to sell anything like enough to break even. You have to be a good lager brewer though. There's no point in making one as an add on brand, and thinking you're going to sell enough. One brewery that have managed ro buck that trend is Wimbledon with the Gold Lager. They have focused on the local SW London market and are doing well. But they are run by one of the best British brewers so he gets his beers spot-on!
    Utopian and Lost & Grounded are two brewers that make excellent lagers and specialise in it. They seem to be selling plenty of cans and rightly so. Their beers are superior to almost every domestic brewed lager (including those that seem like they're brewed in Continental Europe somewhere.)
    On the whole if I'm drinking lager in a pub, I'll try to find Budvar or a German beer if possible before going for a 'Craft lager' I don't know.

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    1. Both the Irish pub and British pub market are strangled by large companies and both don’t even own their largest anymore.
      Oscar

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  8. Camden Hells tastes of nothing.

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    1. An improvement on the usual taste of craft beer

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  9. I ought to say that this post began with the primary intention of simply pointing out that the beer market is now one dominated by lager (and Guinness), and the point about whether microbrewers should compete in lager began as an afterthought.

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  10. A nice cold pint of Peroni2 July 2023 at 08:00

    So CAMRA, when did it all go wrong?

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    1. I think we have failed to educate customers like yourself away from consistent reliable products, Peroni, and towards obscure variable beer you've never heard of.

      So we have ended up with a generation of ignorami unwilling to trust the weird filth we are willing to drink

      I'd like you to consider the pride is drinking well today and you can get a discount on it if you sign up and it isn't that bad when you get used to it. Then you can be discerning like us.

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  11. CAMRA has failed2 July 2023 at 17:08

    This is an EPIC failure for CAMRA. Its leaders at national and branch level have failed and failed miserably.

    CAMRA need to change course and replace the current incompetent incumbents.

    Members deserve better. Members deserve success for their £30. Time to appoint people that can achieve success.

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  12. I love my Bathams and Holden cask ales as do many other from what i see in their pubs.

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    1. And a commentator a few comments above believes the only way to brew good beer is on a massive scale. Size has nothing to do with quality the upscaling in size of meat processors and cheese making has harmed diversity it did the same to beer.
      Oscar

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  13. If every CAMRA member made a commitment to double the number of pints of bitter they drank, they could turn these numbers around. But they don't because they are not really committed.

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  14. Its something I noticed when I was in Manchester recently drinking in many an award winning real ale pub, a group would walk in and invariably end up debating which major brand lager they wanted, not the real ale the pub was renowned for selling, it happens here too, it was just I guess Im used to being in local pubs selling 10-14 real ales and everyone at the bar is ordering the current fizz du jour instead.

    So theres a market absolutely, should micros attempt to get into it I dont know, if international brewers glitzy advertising doesnt work, why do they spend lots of money on it, and how do we explain the sudden popularity of Madri, because its sure not the taste thats selling it, or the price, £6.50 at wimbledon though thats probably average for tourist trap London venues.

    Calvors were a local micro brewery who did make several lagers and were quite good at it, and had quite good local breakthrough on bars, but still wasnt enough to keep them going alone,and theyve since been taken on by Lacons, but Id argue theyve lost market share now as a result and the space they had on those bars is gone to the Madris off this world instead.

    I think its harder to breakthrough for microbrewed lagers, and neither Camden or Meantime were bought for their lagers imo, it was their overall keg/craft beer, they just happened to have a lager in their portfolio

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  15. do you not get tired of the incessant trolling from the usual suspect in these comments? Change the record, please.

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  16. Your insights into the brewing process and the distinct characteristics of various lager styles were enlightening!
    https://www.promocodehq.com/blog/

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