Author Topic: Fire threatens U.S. beer output  (Read 1915 times)

sweetcell

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Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« on: October 03, 2006, 06:00:00 pm »
start hoarding... as if yuenglings  weren't expensive enough already at the 930...
 
 Beer drinkers beware: 4 percent of U.S. hops crop burns
 
 YAKIMA, Washington (AP) -- Federal investigators were set Tuesday to begin an investigation into a fire that ruined about 4 percent of America's yield of hops, used as flavoring in the brewing of beer and ale.
 
 The fire started shortly before noon Monday in a 40,000-square-foot (3,600-square-meter) warehouse operated by S.S. Steiner Inc., one of the four largest hop buyers in the Yakima Valley of central Washington. By mid-afternoon flames engulfed most of the building, sending up plumes of smoke and a pungent aroma.
 
 Municipal fire crews, aided by regional firefighters, ripped away metal siding to shoot water directly onto the hops.
 
 Based on an industry official's estimate of the quantity of hops in the warehouse, the loss could amount to $3.5 million to $4 million. The impact on brewers and beer prices was unclear early Tuesday.
 
 Company President Paul Signorotti would not comment.
 
 The United States produces 24 percent of the world's hops, and about three-fourths of the U.S. crop comes from the Yakima Valley. Hops were a $77 million crop in Washington state in 2004. More than 40 families grow hops in the valley, which is dotted with orchards, vineyards and farms.
 
 Fires have long been an expensive danger at hop warehouses, largely because of the potential for spontaneous combustion from heat buildup in bales of resin-loaded varieties.
 
 "That's just a possibility that we'll look at," East Valley Deputy Chief Mike Riel told the Yakima Herald-Republic, "but it is very high on the list."
 
 No one was in the warehouse when the fire started, Riel said.
 
 With the fire under control Monday night, authorities told the newspaper an investigation into the cause would be led by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
 
 Steiner is part of the Steiner Group of Germany, one of the largest international hop growing, trading and processing companies in the world. The Yakima branch manages Steiner's North American buying and processing, according to the company Web site.
 
 Besides being one of the largest growers in the valley, Steiner is one of three large merchants that buy from other growers in the area. The others are John I. Haas Inc., the grower-owned cooperative Yakima Chief and Hop Union, which specializes in sales to craft brewers.
 
 The fire destroyed or ruined about 10,000 bales, each weighing about 200 pounds (90 kilograms) and likely worth $1.75 to $2 a pound, Ann George, administrator of the Washington Hops Commission in nearby Moxee, told the Herald-Republic.
 
 Seventeen varieties of hops are grown in the United States, including aroma varieties which are added for flavor or fragrance and the bitter alpha varieties.
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walkonby

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2006, 07:02:00 pm »
maybe, if we're lucky, this will put coors and budweiser out of business.

vansmack

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #2 on: October 03, 2006, 07:26:00 pm »
Download Festival in SF had $5 PBRs.
27>34

thingsfallapart

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #3 on: October 03, 2006, 08:12:00 pm »
Solution: drink more liquor.

pela123

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #4 on: October 03, 2006, 09:26:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by walkonby:
  maybe, if we're lucky, this will put coors and budweiser out of business.
the amount of hops either of those companies use in their beer is negligible, this will only really affect the craft brewers who use lots of hops. Maybe this will boost the use of simcoe hops.

walkonby

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #5 on: October 03, 2006, 11:33:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by pela123:
   
Quote
Originally posted by walkonby:
  maybe, if we're lucky, this will put coors and budweiser out of business.
the amount of hops either of those companies use in their beer is negligible, this will only really affect the craft brewers who use lots of hops. Maybe this will boost the use of simcoe hops. [/b]
yeah, you're right.  i guess if a horse piss factory caught fire, then those companies would truely be sweating.

Jaguar

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Re: Fire threatens U.S. beer output
« Reply #6 on: October 08, 2006, 02:32:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by walkonby:
  yeah, you're right.  i guess if a horse piss factory caught fire, then those companies would truely be sweating.
Actually, that would affect the pharmaceutical labs who make Premerin. No joke; look it up!
 
 You'll have to dig deeper in the shit than that for what they use to brew Coors and Bud.
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