• North Carolina, 30 percent growth
o Oregon, 29 percent growth
o Washington, 27 percent growth
o California, 21 percent growth
o Colorado, 16 percent growth
SOURCE: Brewers Association
What do growlers, taps, Busch Gardens and the Florida legislature have in common?
Beer.
Laws regulating the brewing and distribution by small or “craft” brewers in the Sunshine State have become a flashpoint for efforts to change liquor laws in other states. Larger beer interests and wholesale distributors are looking to legislatures for regulations that would make the smaller brewers follow the same state-by-state rules as they do. Those rules govern everything from the size of containers used for the beer to how much can be distributed, if any, outside the wholesaler system.
So-called craft beers — generally produced by small, regional breweries — have grown exponentially in the past five years. Today, brews with catchy names and colorful labels like Old Rasputin Russian Imperial Stout, Lucky Bucket IPA and Flying Dog Pale Ale are cutting into suds sold by big brewers with iconic names such as Budweiser, Coors and Miller Lite.
According to Beer Marketer’s Insights, a trade publication, the craft beer industry produces 16 million barrels annually, approximately 7.8 percent of the total beer volume in the U.S. Back in 2008, the industry produced only 8.9 million barrels for a 4.2 percent share.
The craft beer industry is growing 13 percent to 14 percent each year, with a commensurate drop in production for the “big guys” such as Anheuser-Busch and Coors, from 177.6 million barrels in 2008 down to 162.7 million in 2013, said Beer Marketer’s Insights Vice President Eric Shepard.