Pubs to serve more than 64 million pints of no and low alcohol beer this summer


Pubs will serve more than 64 million pints of no and low alcohol beer this summer, an increase of eight million on last year, according to industry predictions.

The British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) said the โ€œstaggeringโ€ growth proved that โ€˜no and lowโ€™ beers were not simply a fad but had become a โ€œdefining partโ€ of the sector.

Consumers drank approximately 200 million no and low alcohol beers over the course of last year, the categoryโ€™s most successful year on record, the BBPA said.

The trade body found that no and low alcohol beer is the sectorโ€™s biggest growth category across the UK, with volume growth of 870% since 2013.

However, it warned progress was being held back by the UKโ€™s โ€œrestrictiveโ€ definition of โ€˜alcohol freeโ€™.

Currently, an โ€˜alcohol freeโ€™ beer must be below 0.05% ABV (alcohol by volume), which the BBPA said created a barrier for many British brewers seeking to enter the category.

The threshold contrasts with many other countries who define alcohol free as 0.5% ABV.

BBPA chief executive Emma McClarkin said: โ€œNo and low popularity is booming and the categoryโ€™s year-on-year success shows that itโ€™s a category thatโ€™s here to stay.

โ€œBrewers and pubs across the country are already responding to this by serving up great new options which help people choose moderation, if they wish.

โ€œWe need government to keep the momentum going by changing the alcohol-free definition to 0.5%. This will open the door to greater investment, keep us on par with international markets, and deliver even more options for people who choose to moderate โ€“ everyone wins.โ€

James Rabagliati, head brewer at Nirvana Brewery in Leyton, east London, said: โ€œLike any brewery, summer is peak time for sales and the heatwave has had a very positive impact on ours โ€“ especially as some people are moderating their alcohol intake in higher temperatures.

โ€œWeโ€™ve seen people either exclusively drinking alcohol-free beer such as our pils and fruit lagers, or โ€˜Zebra-stripingโ€™ where theyโ€™re alternating between us and alcoholic beers.โ€

Luke Boase, founder of Lucky Saint, said: โ€œSummer sees demand for alcohol-free surge, as people spend longer socialising and enjoying the sun in pub gardens and parks, or watching the sport.

โ€œWe think the Government updating the alcohol-free definition to 0.5% will get more people drinking alcohol-free in this country, which can only be a good thing.โ€

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