How do you brew, bottle and sell beer for $1 that will attract consumers, taste reasonably decent and, at the end of the day, turn a profit?
Several craft breweries across Ontario say Premier Doug Fordâs buck-a-beer promise is too economically difficult to fulfill. Some have called the premierâs challenge âinsulting.â
But a brewer in Picton, Ont., thinks he can pull it off.
At the moment, Barley Days Brewery sells a bottle of its Loyalist Lager for $3 a pop. General manager Kyle Baldwin says he can produce a new lager for a third of that price âwithout jeopardizing any of our ingredients.â
âOur end goal is to try to make it affordable for all Ontarians to have a great beer -- and a great craft beer -- at a great price,â Baldwin told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel on Tuesday.
Ford visited Baldwinâs brewery on Tuesday to announce his buck-a-beer plan, which will see the minimum price of a bottle or can of beer under 5.6 per cent drop to $1 from $1.25. The measure is expected to take effect days before the Labour Day weekend.
Ford plans to use "non-financial incentives," such as prime spots in liquor stores and advertising in flyers, to promote buck-a-beer products.
Baldwin says Fordâs campaign promise inspired his brewery to look into making its own buck-a-beer. Asked how heâd create a quality beer without sacrificing quality, Baldwin said âthe proof is in the pudding.â
âWeâre making our lager the same as we always have, and weâre very confident that we can produce a high-quality beer for a great price,â he said.
Other brewers werenât so sure.
Doug Appeldoorn, owner of Torontoâs Peopleâs Pint Brewing Company, said creating a buck-a-beer for his company would be almost impossible.
âOur cheapest beer costs us about $1.40 to make, and thatâs just pure cost to make the beer. It doesnât include anything else like, you know, our rent, paying our staff, insurance -- all the other costs of running a brewery,â Appeldoorn said.
For $1, Appeldoorn said heâd only be able to offer âa really, really small beer.â And he doubts many other brewers will take the premierâs bait.
âI canât see many doing it. Itâs just not feasible for a lot of us to do it,â he said.
âYou couldnât be more tone deafâ
Geordan Saunders, owner of Napanee Beer Co. in Napanee, Ont., says heâs concerned that Fordâs plan encourages âa race to the bottomâ that could benefit big corporate brewers while penalizing smaller companies.
âItâs asking small businesses across Ontario â family-owned businesses that employ people in their communities â to make less money on the product that they work so hard for,â Saunders said.
In reality, Saunders said, small brewers like his simply wonât be able to afford selling beer for $1.
âBy encouraging things like better shelf space at the LCBO, that really only benefits the brewers who can afford to make buck-a-beer, which is big brewers like Molson and not the little guys,â he said.
Toronto-based Great Lakes Brewery echoed that sentiment on Twitter, saying it has no plans to drop its prices.
"We believe in our brands, take pride in our quality and firmly feel that are current prices are very fair," the company tweeted.
Eric Portelance, who co-owned Torontoâs Halo Brewery, penned an open letter to Fordâs PC government calling the move âinsultingâ as the industry struggles with steel and aluminum tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump.
"You couldn't be more tone deaf on this subject," Portelance wrote.
Buck-a-beer isnât entirely new in Ontario. The province used to allow beer to be sold for $1, but the Liberal government increased the minimum price in 2008, citing a mandate of âsocial responsibility.â
With files from The Canadian Press