E-Malt. E-Malt.com News article: USA, PA: Susquehanna Brewing Company buys new fermenters to expand production capacity

Go back! News start menu!
[Top industry news] [Brewery news] [Malt news ] [Barley news] [Hops news] [More news] [All news] [Search news archive] [Publish your news] [News calendar] [News by countries]
#
E-Malt.com News article: USA, PA: Susquehanna Brewing Company buys new fermenters to expand production capacity
Brewery news

Four 100-barrel fermenters were delivered to the Susquehanna Brewing Company over the last two days, bringing the total number of beer tanks to 11, citizensvoice.com reported on July 30.

The new equipment is part of a $350,000 expansion project to increase beer production.

Owners Mark Nobile and Ed Maier, the great-great-grandson of Charles Stegmaier, said they purchased the equipment in response to increased sales and the need for additional brands of craft brews, which have become a bright spot in the beer industry.

“As you create more brands and have more sales, you need more capacity,” Nobile said.

They ordered the fermenters from stainless steel tank manufacturer JV Northwest in Oregon, which also manufactured the brewery’s other seven 150-barrel fermenters.

Brewmaster Guy Hagner said the new beer tanks will “enable us to continue doing what we’re doing and do more of it and even bring on some new things.”

“With the seven tanks we had, we’ve been having to juggle quite a bit,” said Hagner, who has worked in the brewing business for 30 years. “What we needed was the ability to do more different things rather than more of just one or two things.” Each tank cost about $35,000. The total cost for delivery and installation was about $191,000. They also plan to spend about $150,000 for automation and packaging equipment, Maier said.

The expansion comes more than two years after Susquehanna Brewing Company began brewing its first batch of beer at 635 S. Main St. in Jenkins Township that formerly housed the United Beverage business they operated.

Since then, Maier said growth has been significant at the brewery, with sales increasing 60 percent as of June this year compared to 2013. Craft brew sales have increased and now represent 10 percent of the overall beer market, he said.

“Craft has been the only shining star in the brewing industry over the last 10 or 12 years,” Maier said. “The major domestics have lost a tremendous amount of volume.”

Susquehanna Brewing Company produces five year-round brands and six seasonal brands, and supplies beer to bars, restaurants, retail distributors and grocery stores in 52 counties in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Nobile said.

“When we first started, we opened up with two brands,” Nobile said. “By the end of our first year, we had four everyday brands. Our first year, we did two seasonals: Oktoberfest and Peach Pumpkinberry. In year two, we started adding more seasonals.”

The numbers of employees at Susquehanna Brewing Company also has increased to 15, Nobile said, and they plan to hire two more employees for brewing and bottling.


01 August, 2014

   
|
| Printer friendly |

Copyright © E-Malt s.a. 2001 - 2011