U.S. Craft Brewing Sees Huge Growth; Tops 5% Market Share
 
	
          Good  news in the fight for real beer: light is out and craft is in.  According to data just released by The Brewers Association, there are  now more than 2000 breweries operating in the U.S. That’s more than an  11% increase in the past year alone, and a huge surge since a low of just 80 breweries in the 1980s.
What  does the explosion of micro- and nano-breweries mean on the retail end?  Sales of craft beer rose 15% from 2010 to 2011 (corresponding to a 13%  growth in volume). This expansion of the small batch niche is happening  even as the beer market as a whole is contracting.
Overall, if you include macro-brewers Molson Coors, SABMiller and Anheuser-Busch Inbev, the U.S. beer market saw a 1.5% decline in volume.  What is losing ground is the wholly American invented category of light  beer – which makes up four of the five best-selling labels in the  country. Craft suds now account for more than 5% of the total market  share by volume and more than 9% by sales.
The  Brewers Association cautions that these numbers are only preliminary,  noting that a full report will be released this summer, but they are  reason to celebrate. Check out some more stats in the nifty infographic  below.
























