Beer shortage warning for India as Iran war hits supply
Indian consumers could soon face higher beer prices and potential supply disruptions as global brewers operating in the country grapple with escalating costs driven by a gas shortage linked to the Iran war.
The conflict has led to a surge in the price of glass bottles and significant shipping delays for aluminium, crucial for can production.
India, the world’s fourth-largest importer of natural gas, is particularly susceptible to fuel availability issues, relying heavily on the Middle East for its supply, with approximately 40 per cent sourced from Qatar.
Iranian attacks have partially hampered Qatar’s export capacity, tightening gas availability for Indian manufacturers.

The Brewers Association of India, representing major players such as Heineken, Anheuser-Busch InBev, and Carlsberg, informed Reuters that glass bottle prices have soared by around 20 per cent. Additionally, paper carton rates have doubled, alongside increases for other essential packaging materials like labels and tape.
Gas is essential to keeping furnaces and production lines running, and shortages have forced several glass bottle makers to partially or fully halt operations.
Aluminium can suppliers have also warned of possible reductions just as India heads into its peak summer season, when beer sales typically rise.
“We are asking for price increases in the range of 12-15 per cent,” the association’s director general Vinod Giri told Reuters. “We have advised our member companies to individually approach states.”
The rising cost of production is making some operations unsustainable, he added.
Heineken’s India unit United Breweries UBBW.NS, Anheuser-Busch InBev and Carlsberg did not respond to Reuters queries.
The market was worth $7.8 billion in 2024, and is expected to double by 2030, Grand View Research says. Heineken alone accounts for roughly half the market, while AB InBev and Carlsberg each account for 19 per cent, the association said.
While the three companies dominate India’s beer sector, many smaller players such as Bira and Simba also operate in the market.
Glass and plastics industry crisis
Beer and liquor sales in India have grown steadily alongside rising urbanisation and a young, increasingly affluent population.
The Confederation of Indian Alcoholic Beverage Companies, which represents many domestic companies, said it has written to several states seeking price adjustments to offset rising freight, logistics and input costs.
India’s alcohol sector is tightly regulated, and raising retail prices typically requires approval. Around two-thirds of India’s 28 states must authorise changes.
“Brewers may find it difficult to maintain supplies in states that do not allow price increases,” the association said.
Some glass bottle vendors are warning their clients of reduced supplies and have increased their prices.
Nitin Agarwal, CEO of Fine Art Glass Works in Firozabad, a glass-making hub in northern Uttar Pradesh state, said he has cut production by 40 per cent at his glass bottle making factory due to gas shortages. His customers include many liquor companies as well as producers of juice and ketchup bottles.
“We’ve cut production and increased prices by 17-18 per cent,” Agarwal said.
The shortages have already affected India’s $5 billion bottled โwater market with some producers increasing prices by 11 per cent due to rising rates of plastic bottles and caps.
And there are signs the crisis is spreading.
An executive at Lotte Chilsung Beverage, one of the leading South Korean soft drinks companies, told Reuters that it has up to three months of inventory for plastic bottles and plastic materials.
“The situation is serious,” he said.
