novascotia map

Canada’s New Craft Beer Capital?

A little over a year ago I ran a few statistics to compare Canada and the U.S. and the Canadian provinces in terms of their craft brewing scenes. You can read that analysis here. The numbers at the time were a bit surprising, showing that Canada stacks up better than we thought in terms of numbers of craft breweries. The number for the provinces were less surprising, but I think told a good story about the state of each region’s craft beer scene.

2015 was likely a record for new brewery openings across Canada. I have been doing my best to keep track of them all, and felt it might be time to take another look at how each province is doing. The table below outlines the number of craft breweries in each province. Like last time I have excluded breweries not yet open but either announced or in the planning stages (it is just to unreliable a number). However this time I debated adding contract breweries whom I included last time (contract breweries have no production facility of their own and pay other breweries to produce their brands for them). In the end I decided to compromise and offer numbers both including and excluding contract breweries. Brewpub chains count as one, regardless of how many locations they have.

Craft BreweriesContract BreweriesPer 100,000 PopulationPer 100,000 Pop. (w. contract)
B.C.10892.312.50
Alberta2340.550.64
Saskatchewan1501.321.32
Manitoba210.150.23
Ontario174421.261.57
Quebec126141.521.69
Nova Scotia3003.183.18
New Brunswick2012.652.79
P.E.I.302.052.05
Newfoundland300.570.57
Territories302.542.54

[Edited to correct error in Saskatchewan calculation.]

The big surprise is the top of the table. B.C. is dethroned and actually falls to fourth, behind Nova Scotia – the only province to break the 3 per 100,000 barrier, surging New Brunswick and the Territories (who tripled the number of breweries to three). Manitoba still lags, by quite a distance, followed by Alberta and Newfoundland (the only three provinces with fewer than 1 brewery per 100,000. There then is a cluster of provinces floating between 1 and 2 per 100,000.

In terms of the biggest gains year-over-year, that title goes to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, who had 10 and 8 new breweries, respectively, open in the past 14 months. Manitoba actually lost ground and most provinces either stayed stagnant or saw modest gains in their per population number of breweries.

Now, the numbers only tell part of a story. Population growth is also a factor in these statistics. Populations are stagnant in Atlantic Canada and Alberta’s numbers, in particular, are skewed by large population growth last year. It is also easier for tiny Nova Scotia to post impressive percentages since they have relatively few breweries to begin with. Ontario had almost 50 new breweries open (many of those contract breweries), but that figure translates into more modest increases.

The other factor we need to consider is brewery size. The new breweries in the Atlantic are small. Many are nanobreweries. Many, if not most, of the breweries opening in Ontario, B.C. and Alberta are full scale craft breweries (in the Canadian context) with systems of 25 hl or more. Don’t get me wrong, small breweries can actually be a better indicator of a healthy craft beer scene than a handful of larger players. But, the barriers to opening a nano that serves a town of a couple thousand are lower than trying to open in a metropolitan city.

The final caveat is the exclusion of planned breweries. This decision particularly screwed around Manitoba, who is on the verge of having 3 new breweries open, which would double their numbers overnight. Alberta, to my knowledge, has eight breweries in planning stages, which could also improve their numbers significantly.

Overall, my take is that craft beer continues to be healthy and is in its fastest expansion phase in over 20 years. Plus the diversity of breweries in terms of size, locale, brewing focus, marketing choices and target audiences, is impressive. We have never seen more diversity in beer since prohibition.

But the relatively modest growth in the actual per population statistics tell us two things. First, opening a craft brewery continues to be a difficult, challenging thing to do that a rare few have the determination to accomplish. Second, craft beer continues to struggle to become an anchor of the beer industry in the country. It may be easier to open a brewery than 10 years ago, but it remains a tough slog to make it successful.

While we are making great strides, and Canadians should be very happy for all the new local choices they have, we still have a long way to go before Canada, or even parts of it, look like Portland, Denver or Boston.