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[EN] [GR] Beer serves Europe and the World: Europe’s Brewers keep trade and the economy flowing

Beer serves Europe and the World: Europe ‘s Brewers keep trade and the economy flowing 

At their sixth annual Beer Serves Europe event, The Brewers of Europe are emphasising how their 7,500 breweries not only underpin economic growth in Europe but also make a significant contribution to trade with the rest of the world. Two new publications, the 180-country study Beer Connects Europe with the World and the 2016 edition of Beer Statistics, highlight how beer is accompanying Europe’s economic recovery and flowing increasingly towards fast growing areas of the globe.

Total consumer spending on beer was over €110 billion in the EU in 2014, an indication that a recovery from the 2008 crisis was in place. The latest statistics confirm that the European brewing sector is now firmly on the path to prosperity. Consumption and production are not just stable, but improving with year-on-year rises in European Union countries from 2014 to 2015 of 1% in consumption and 1.4% in production. Meanwhile beer is growing at the fastest rate among the top 10 food and drinks products in the EU by export value. Next year, at current rates of growth, beer will be up from 10th place to 6th place.

“The Brewers of Europe are proud of the major part they play in the European economy, generating considerable employment and boosting trade both within the EU and beyond. Supportive policies will enable brewers to continue contributing to the overall competitiveness of the European economy and sustained growth,” said Pavlos Photiades, President of The Brewers of Europe.

Beer is back for good

The European brewing sector is a key actor for job creation and the economy and is playing its part in supporting the delivery of the Europe 2020 Growth Strategy. Beer adds the equivalent of the GDP of Luxembourg, or around €51bn, annually to EU output and over €11bn in excise revenues for governments. The sector provides over 120,000 direct jobs in the EU alone, but nearly 95% of beer-generated employment occurs outside the brewing companies themselves: every one of these jobs is the catalyst for further jobs across the entire value chain, creating over 17 jobs in the wider economy, making a total of 2.3 million.
In addition to continued investment by Europe’s brewers in establishing European beer brands around the world, in 2015 European beer exports rose to 82 million hectolitres, an increase of 7% year-on-year. In 2008, exports beyond the EU accounted for 16% of the total. In 2015 the proportion has more than doubled to 35%.

Maximising micro: The Brewers of Europe’s inclusive agenda

A sure sign of confidence and trust in the sector is the continuous rise in new breweries opening across the EU since 2008 and the total has almost doubled since 2010. There were 588 new microbreweries established in the year from 2014 to 2015, a rise of 13%. The trend attests to the high level of consumer interest in the diversity and variety of Europe’s many different beer cultures.

Pavlos Photiades explains: “Europe’ s brewing sector is experiencing a Renaissance. Alongside the major global

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