Competition watchdog should probe dominance of big brewers, say campaigners
The UK competition watchdog should investigate the UK beer market over concerns about the dominance of a small number of large brewers, according to campaigners.
A fresh report by Camra (Campaign for Real Ale) has claimed that small, independent breweries are โbeing excludedโ from pubs and bars due to the contractual power of larger rivals.
Ash Corbett-Collins, chairman of Camra, said โordinary drinkers are being short changed when it comes to choice and qualityโ as a result.
Data from the Society of Independent Brewers & Associates (SIBA) found that 137 independent breweries closed in the UK in 2025, leaving 1,578 at the start of the year.
The report by Camra claims that the strong reputation of British brewers is now being โtrashed by big businessโ.
It found that 80% of UK beer is now produced by foreign firms, with this predominantly from four major global brewers.
In 1990, 96% of UK brewing was British owned, but a raft of historic and fast-growing breweries have been snapped up by global players in recent years.
Multinational brewers have also shut a number of their British brewery sites in recent years, particularly through consolidation efforts to combine factory operations.
Earlier this year, Molson Coors announced the closure of its Sharpโs Brewery in Cornwall, with production of Sharpโs beers, such as Doom Bar, moving to other production sites.
Last year, the Carlsberg Marstonโs Brewing Company (CMBC) shut the Banksโs Brewery site in Wolverhampton.
The report also found that seven of the top 10 selling โcraft beersโ in the UK are made by the four global brewing conglomerates.
The organisation has called for Government intervention to help catalyse growth among small brewers, arguing that this would support economic growth and the creation of jobs.
Mr Corbett-Collins said: โThe Government needs to step up, start taking the issue seriously, and take action that matches up to their statements about supporting pubs and the communities they serve.
โAndy Burnham recently said that โpeople need to be able to look forward to a night outโ.
โThe best way he can deliver on that is by ordering a proper market investigation to sort this mess out and deliver a fair deal for publicans and drinkers, and the independent brewers that they want to support.โ
Tim Webb, editor of the report, said: โThe fact that a narrow clique of multinational corporations dominates the UK brewing industry is a national embarrassment.
โThey only make beers that suit their production facilities, ignoring the types that beer lovers want to drink.
โThey do not know how to reverse beerโs downward spiral, make little profit, and brew nothing worth exporting. They cannot grow the UK economy.โ
