Alberta's craft breweries have tripled in 3 years with dozens more on tap - Action News
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Alberta's craft breweries have tripled in 3 years with dozens more on tap

Alberta's craft beer industry is a shining example of economic diversification with dozens of new breweries in a few years and more to come, industry leaders said as hundreds gathered for an inaugural convention in Red Deer.

Roughly 400 gathered in Red Deer for inaugural craft brewing convention

Craft breweries in Alberta on the rise

7 years ago
Duration 0:30
Number of small breweries have tripled in 3 years

The number of craft breweries in Alberta has tripled over the last three years, and the trend is expected to continue, with at least 30 new breweries being planned in Alberta this year, sayindustry insiders.

"Albertafarmers grow some of the world's most sought after barley and agricultural products. It only makes sense to grow the brewing industry right here and support good jobs from grain to glass," said Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci, who was in Red Deer for the province'sfirst Alberta CraftBrewingConventionon Wednesday.

He was highlighting the$25 million earmarkedfor theAlbertaSmall Brewers Development Program announced in the 2017 budget.

Terry Rock, executive director of the Alberta Small BrewersAssociation, said the province has 54 brewing licenses now compared to 18 in 2014.

"It's a real economic diversification story thatAlbertansshould be proud of," said Rock, one ofhundreds who attended the convention.

Brewers say the proliferation of micro-breweries was made possibleafter theprovince removed minimum production limits in 2013.

"So now everyone's allowed to start and play in this space, as opposed to the big guys that used to have that minimum production value that you used to need," said Dan Allard, co-owner of Cold Garden, a new brewery that opened this year in Inglewood.

Local brewer Dan Allard says the new generation of brewers is getting along quite well. 'The saturation thing has been buzzing around ... but we're so far from that,' he says. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

Old laws required brewers to produce 500,000 litres per year in order to sell commercially.

Allard says there's lots of room for growth, and he's not at all worried about the competition.

"The camaraderie is very good, and it'll be like that for a long time," he said.

"There's a lot of market share to chip away at from the big guys before we ever step on each others' toes as the little guys. And so it's a very friendly space to be working in, and consumers love it," he said.

Not just breweries

The craft beer boom is also rippingthroughrural Alberta, said Ben Leon, co-ownerof Dandy Brewing Company.

Leon said he's witnessedan explosion of small-town micro-malters and hops and barley farmers, who are creating much-needed jobs.

Roughly 400 craft beer enthusiasts turned out to the first annual craft brewing convention in Red Deer earlier this week. (Andrew Brown/CBC)

"The industry isn't just supporting breweries. It's supporting the entire brewing industry, and that's pretty awesome," he said.

Rock says craft beer still has a long way to go in Alberta, where it currently commands less than 10 per cent of the market share.

But he's confident that's going to grow.

"People don't stop drinking craft beer and go back to industrial beer. Once they figure it out, and once they have their local favourites, they're a craft beer drinker for life."

Rock said there are even breweries that will soon spring up in Ponoka and Jasper.

"Pretty much everywhere you are in the province, you have a local option now. We hope people take advantage of that."

With files from Andrew Brown