Doireann Garrihy chats to PJ Tierney, Heineken Cork, for this sales pitch for Drinks Ireland. There is no mention of alcohol in this #alcoholad

711 views Jan 6, 2020Doireann Garrihy takes a trip to Cork city to visit the Heineken brewery. Situated right in the heart of Cork city this brewery has some really impressive sustainability credentials. Enjoy alcohol responsibly.

Drinks Ireland

@DrinksIreland

·

In 2018

@Heineken_IE

used just 3.09 litres of water to brew 1 litre of beer making it one of the most efficient breweries in the Heineken network. Join

@DoireannGarrihy

as she learns a little more about their sustainability credentials #SláinteToThat

 https://youtu.be/bJHEZvkCArU

Doireann Garrihy chats to PJ Tierney, Heineken Cork, for this sales pitch for Drinks Ireland. There is no mention of alcohol in this #alcoholad #rte

711 views Jan 6, 2020Doireann Garrihy takes a trip to Cork city to visit the Heineken brewery. Situated right in the heart of Cork city this brewery has some really impressive sustainability credentials. Enjoy alcohol responsibly.

Drinks Ireland

@DrinksIreland

·

In 2018

@Heineken_IE

used just 3.09 litres of water to brew 1 litre of beer making it one of the most efficient breweries in the Heineken network. Join

@DoireannGarrihy

as she learns a little more about their sustainability credentials #SláinteToThat

 https://youtu.be/bJHEZvkCArU

Doireann Garrihy chats to PJ Tierney, Heineken Cork, for this sales pitch for Drinks Ireland. There is no mention of alcohol in this #alcoholad #alcoholaware #hidedeandeceive

711 views Jan 6, 2020Doireann Garrihy takes a trip to Cork city to visit the Heineken brewery. Situated right in the heart of Cork city this brewery has some really impressive sustainability credentials. Enjoy alcohol responsibly.

Drinks Ireland

@DrinksIreland

·

In 2018

@Heineken_IE

used just 3.09 litres of water to brew 1 litre of beer making it one of the most efficient breweries in the Heineken network. Join

@DoireannGarrihy

as she learns a little more about their sustainability credentials #SláinteToThat

 https://youtu.be/bJHEZvkCArU

Doireann Garrihy chats to PJ Tierney-Heineken Cork for Drinks Ireland #alcoholad #alcoholaware

711 views Jan 6, 2020Doireann Garrihy takes a trip to Cork city to visit the Heineken brewery. Situated right in the heart of Cork city this brewery has some really impressive sustainability credentials. Enjoy alcohol responsibly.

Drinks Ireland

@DrinksIreland

·

In 2018

@Heineken_IE

used just 3.09 litres of water to brew 1 litre of beer making it one of the most efficient breweries in the Heineken network. Join

@DoireannGarrihy

as she learns a little more about their sustainability credentials #SláinteToThat

 https://youtu.be/bJHEZvkCArU

Alcohol consumption down by 10% between 2019 and 2021 according to Patricia Callan @DrinksIreland #internationalbeerday

New provisional data from Revenue shows that alcohol consumption fell by 4.7% between 2020 and 2021 as the hospitality sector endured strict lockdowns in an effort to stop the spread of Covid-19.
Alcohol consumption saw a fall of 9.6% between 2019 and 2021, which Drinks Ireland said showed the true impact of Covid related restrictions and closures on hospitality venues.
Beer and cider consumption saw the most dramatic declines due to their popularity in pub trade. Beer consumption fell by 18.3% between 2019 and 2021 and cider was down by 15.1%.
Meanwhile, wine consumption was down by 13.1% between 2020 and 2021 and by 2.7% between 2019 and 2021.
Spirits consumption remained relatively static, rising marginally by 1.9% between 2019 and 2021.
Drinks Ireland said that people have progressively been drinking less since 2001.
It noted that alcohol consumption is now at its lowest level in 20 years and has fallen by about 30% since 2001.

Patricia Callan, Director of Drinks Ireland, said today’s data shows the continued decline in alcohol consumption in Ireland, exacerbated by the Covid pandemic.
“The industry has worked hard to continue to tackle alcohol misuse. The growing trend we see at home and in other established international markets is people choosing to drink quality over quantity, which we welcome and will continue to encourage,” Ms Callan added.

Alcohol consumption down by 10% between 2019 and 2021 according to Patricia Callan @DrinksIreland

New provisional data from Revenue shows that alcohol consumption fell by 4.7% between 2020 and 2021 as the hospitality sector endured strict lockdowns in an effort to stop the spread of Covid-19.
Alcohol consumption saw a fall of 9.6% between 2019 and 2021, which Drinks Ireland said showed the true impact of Covid related restrictions and closures on hospitality venues.
Beer and cider consumption saw the most dramatic declines due to their popularity in pub trade. Beer consumption fell by 18.3% between 2019 and 2021 and cider was down by 15.1%.
Meanwhile, wine consumption was down by 13.1% between 2020 and 2021 and by 2.7% between 2019 and 2021.
Spirits consumption remained relatively static, rising marginally by 1.9% between 2019 and 2021.
Drinks Ireland said that people have progressively been drinking less since 2001.
It noted that alcohol consumption is now at its lowest level in 20 years and has fallen by about 30% since 2001.

Patricia Callan, Director of Drinks Ireland, said today’s data shows the continued decline in alcohol consumption in Ireland, exacerbated by the Covid pandemic.
“The industry has worked hard to continue to tackle alcohol misuse. The growing trend we see at home and in other established international markets is people choosing to drink quality over quantity, which we welcome and will continue to encourage,” Ms Callan added.

Irish beer (alcohol) slump @DrinksIreland

News

/ 10th May 2022 /

BP Reporter

The continued closure of hospitality venues domestically and in key international markets resulted in another challenging year for Irish brewers in 2021 with alcohol consumption down, according to a new report.

The annual Irish Beer Market Report from Drinks Ireland|Beer shows that the pandemic resulted in a 46% fall in production between 2020 and 2021, with sales down by 1.3% and per capita consumption down by 2.3%.

Overall alcohol consumption continues to decline dramatically in Ireland.

Revenue data shows that alcohol consumption fell by 4.7% between 2020 and 2021, and declined by 9.6% between 2019 and 2021.

On a longer-term basis, alcohol consumption is at its lowest level in 20 years, down by about 30% since the peak of 2001.

The value of beer exports fell by 3% last year but were still significant at €246m. The most popular destination for Irish beer was Great Britain, with the United States in second place.

According to the report, pre-Covid around 30% of beer consumed in Ireland was stout. This fell to 25.3% in 2020 and recovered to 32.2% last year.

Lager, which was more popular during Covid as it was consumed at home, saw its market share fall last year by eight points while ale’s market share improved by one point.

Non-alcoholic beer market share rose from 1.1% in 2020 to 1.5% in 2021. For context, non-alcoholic beer’s market share was 0.4% in 2017.