BCBusiness

September 2018 The China Threat

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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NIK wESt 28 BCBusiness SEptEmBER 2018 In front of the cameras, Central City brewmaster Gary Lohin and vice-president of sales Daryn Medwid announce that the company will be selling its most popular brand, Red Racer beer, in 500-millilitre cans at 355-millilitre pricing for the fore- seeable future. "We've been making great, consistent beer since 2003; nobody can argue with that. But with the technolo„y today, it's not hard for lots of people to make good beer," Medwid explains. "So you have many small competitors; they continue to open up at the bottom end of the market, they continue to nibble at your heels. And from the top end, the scale brewers like Anheuser-Busch and Molson Coors are trying to go after the craft market. So, being one of the larger craft brewers in the country, where can you go? The only thing to do is to ‹ght up." It might not seem like a game-changing move—what's 145 millilitres, after all? But there are about 140 breweries in B.C., and it's a safe bet that every single one of them hears the news that day. Some competitors shake their ‹sts and playfully utter "Damn them," while oth- ers opine that the switch devalues Central City's product. There are even rumours that a new B.C. Liquor Distribu- tion Branch rule on the size of single cans—meaning brewers can sell 473 milli- litres instead of the usual 500—forced Central City to make the change so it could use up its 500-millilitre inventory. But all of those rivals know that one of the province's biggest craft beer producers is separating itself from the pack, a must for every brewery in an indus- try that sees more competition each year. "You've got two loaves of bread that cost the same and taste the same," Lohin says. Full-scale riot morgan moreira, Ralf Rosenke and aly Tomlin of Riot Brewing in Chemainus

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