“Oh, yes, that is quite common. The import has grown enormously as well,” says Tore Nybø. He is the CEO of Nøgne Ø, the brewery that is often credited with getting this whole thing going in Norway.
Nøgne Ø was established in Grimstad, southeast in Norway, in late 2002. Yet when Nybø bought into the company a couple of years later, they were at the brink of bankruptcy.
“There was no market for craft beer. We did our own distribution driving around in private cars, in addition to sales at Vinmonopolet”. (The government-owned alcoholic beverage retailer, that is). Nybø, too, was already a home brewer at the time.
Through the collective effort of the founders of the brewery, friends and acquaintances, the small company ploughed through, and scaled up the production.
Now operating on a much larger scale, Nøgne Ø still excels with some of the market’s best craft beers. But they are followed by a multitude of others, like Haandbryggeriet, Lervig, Austmann, Kinn – and Ægir. “The success is largely due to an exceptional openness and transparency in the business,” says Nybø, who applauds the cooperation and unity even between competitors. Or rather, as they say: colleagues.
While craft breweries are emerging all over the world and make similar beers, it’s not given that these would catch on with the Norwegian populace.
“The worst case scenario is that a few breweries deliver subpar beers, and those who taste it figure that this whole craft beer thing isn’t for them. Fortunately the quality of craft beers being brewed in Norway has always been very high,” says Evan Lewis.
He is echoed by Tore Nybø: “Our slogan is that we’re the brewery that refuses to compromise. That has cost us a few litres. But if we were to ship an average beer, it would hurt the entire business”.
Nybø reckons that the trend really exploded in Norway about four or five years ago. Many are now very conscious indeed about what beer they drink, they experiment with different kinds and tastes, and even try their hand at brewing at home.
“When you start scratching the surface of the world of beer, there’s so much fun to latch onto. After a while, you’ll start to taste and experience beer in a whole new way,” he says. “When I meet my friends these days, we typically bring four different beers each, and we taste about a decilitre at a time.”
“That is much more rewarding than if all of us had each our six-pack.”