Tsingtao Brewery
Past packaging of Tsingtao Beer in a display at the Qingdao Beer Museum. | |
Public company | |
Traded as |
SEHK: 168 SSE: 600600 OTC Pink: TSGTY |
Founded | 1903 |
Headquarters | Qingdao, Shandong, China |
Area served | Global export |
Key people | Chairman: Jin Zhiguo |
Revenue | CN¥29.049 billion (2014)[1] |
CN¥1.990 billion (2014)[1] | |
Website | www.tsingtaobeer.com |
Tsingtao Brewery Co.,Ltd. (simplified Chinese: 青岛啤酒厂; traditional Chinese: 青島啤酒廠; pinyin: Qīngdǎo píjiǔchǎng; German: Tsingtao-Brauerei) (SEHK: 168 SSE: 600600,OTC Pink: TSGTY) is China's second largest brewery.[2] It was founded in 1903 by German settlers and now claims about 15% of domestic market share.[3] The beer is produced in Qingdao in Shandong province (and more recently in other breweries owned by the company as well), and it gets its name from the old École française d'Extrême-Orient transliteration of the city's name. The beer's present-day logo displays an image of Zhan Qiao, a famous pier on Qingdao's southern shore.
History
The Tsingtao Brewery was founded by The Anglo-German Brewery Co. Ltd., an English-German joint stock company based in Hong Kong who owned it until 1916. The brewery was founded on August 15, 1903 as the Germania-Brauerei (Germania Brewery) with a paid-in capital of 400,000 Mexican silver dollars divided into 4,000 shares priced at $100 each.[4]
- Founding members of the Supervisory Board[4]
- John Prentice, of SCFarnham, Boyd & Co., Ltd., Shanghai
- Alexander McLeod, of Gibb, Livingston & Co., Shanghai
- CW Wrightson, of Fearon, Daniel & Co., Shanghai
- Max Slevogt, of Slevogt & Co., Shanghai
- J.Jürgen Block, of H. Sietas & Co., Qufu
- Brewery Directors[4]
- Heinrich Seifart (1904 – 25.11.1907)
- Ernst Siemssen (Nov. 1907–1914)
- Brewmasters[4]
- R. Schuster (1904–1905)
- Martin Wehle (1906–14)
The first beer was served on December 22, 1904.[4]
On August 16, 1916 an extraordinary general meeting was held in Shanghai. Liquidators were appointed and it was decided the company would be sold to the Dai-Nippon Brewery (which in 1949 was split into Asahi Breweries and what later became Sapporo Brewery). The Japanese military administration in Tsingtao approved the liquidation on September 9, 1916. German equity was approximately 70 percent. The German share of the sales price attributable to shareholders was in the hands of the liquidators by April 2, 1921.[4][5]
Nationalization
After Japan's surrender to the Allies and its retreat from China, the Tsingtao Brewery was turned into a Chinese brewery under ownership of the Tsui family and supervision of the Nationalist government in Nanjing. However, this period of ownership only lasted until 1949 when, after a civil war, the People's Republic of China was founded. Shortly after, due to Communist policies, all private shares of the Tsingtao Brewery that had previously belonged to the Tsui family were confiscated and the company became a state-owned enterprise.
Privatization
The company was privatized in the early 1990s and in 1993 merged with three other breweries in Qingdao and was finally renamed Tsingtao Brewery Company Limited. At one point 27% of the company was owned by Anheuser-Busch. The company once owned several other breweries in China, some of which also produced Tsingtao Beer.
On January 23, 2009, Anheuser-Busch InBev announced that it was selling 19.9% to Asahi Breweries for $667 million. The sale will make Asahi Breweries, Ltd. the second largest shareholder in Tsingtao behind only the Tsingtao Brewery Group. On May 9, 2009 Anheuser-Busch InBev sold its remaining 7% to Chinese tycoon Chen Fashu (陈发树) for $235 million.[6]
Beer styles
Tsingtao Beer, a well-hopped standard pilsner of 4.7% alcohol, is the flagship brew, accounting for most of the brewery's production. An unpasteurised version is sold as Tsingtao Draft Beer. Tsingtao Beer was long advertised as being "brewed with mineral water from the Laoshan Spring," which contributed to its characteristic flavor; however, this now applies only to beer produced in Qingdao, not to that produced in the company's other breweries. Originally, Tsingtao Beer was brewed in accordance with the German Reinheitsgebot ('Purity Law') of 1516, therefore the only ingredients that were used were water, barley, and hops. However, after privatization the recipe changed; like many other beers made in China, Tsingtao Beer contains a proportion of the less-expensive rice as an adjunct in the mash.
The brewery also produces a number of other beers, mostly for the local market. Those sometimes found outside China include Tsingtao Dark Beer (5.2% alcohol), and more rarely Tsingtao Spirulina Green Beer, also sold as Tsingtao Green Beer, a 4.5% alcohol green-coloured pilsner containing spirulina as an additive, and claimed to promote good health. (Note: alcohol content of export versions may vary slightly.)
Export orientation
The beer market in China was very underdeveloped until into the 1980s and the brewery was forced to concentrate on overseas markets. The Chinese economic reforms in the early 1980s facilitated exportation. However, while concentrating on international markets, the brewery also attempted to sell its beer on the domestic market and competed with other domestic brands as well as foreign brands.
The main export company for the brewery was the "Good Harvest of Five Grains Corporation" based in Hong Kong. The Good Harvest of Five Grains Corporation also tried to market the beer in Hong Kong itself and later built a wholesale network consisting of up to 300 companies.
Tsingtao Beer was introduced to the United States in 1972, and soon became the top-selling Chinese beer in the U.S. market; it has maintained this leadership within the United States ever since, despite increasing competition from other well known Chinese beer brands, Zhujiang and Yanjing. As of 2008, distribution in the UK and Ireland is handled by Halewood International Ltd. The Tsingtao brand is sold in 62 countries and regions around the world[7] and accounts for more than 50% of China’s beer exports. According to the company's financial figures from 2010, Tsingtao saw a 6.6% year on year revenue increase from sales to Hong Kong and other overseas markets.[8]
National marketing
Before the 1949 takeover by the new PRC government, the brewery had used imported raw material and water from the Laoshan mountain. With the outbreak of the Korean War and the resulting embargo of the People's Republic by the West, the brewery was forced to use domestic products, and the government encouraged peasants in Shandong to harvest the necessary raw materials (mainly hops and barley) themselves. The government used various incentives, like free seeds, to achieve this goal.
The brewery had previously used nationalistic marketing strategies, and after the switchover to production using only domestic material this nationalist marketing effort was increased. However, the brewery still mentioned its international roots.
International Beer Festival
The brewery first applied for permission for a Qingdao International Beer Festival in 1991 and received approval and support from the Qingdao municipal administration, even to the extent that the city became the main sponsor. The first festival was opened on June 23, 1991, and has been held annually ever since. The festival was named "International Beer Festival" to attract foreigners as well as Chinese, although the main purpose of the festival was to make the brand more popular for domestic consumers.[9]
The festival is usually held in late August and lasts for 14 days. During the festival, there are shows in the city and people enjoy many varieties of international beer instead of only Tsingtao. Nowadays the International Beer Festival is not meant simply to publicize the Tsingtao Brewery, but also to encourage the development of the culture of beer in Qingdao.
In popular culture
- In 1982 science fiction film Blade Runner, the character Deckard is shown buying a bottle of Tsingtao right after dispatching the replicant Zhora. However it appears not to be the beer but a liquor since the liquid is clear (and the bottle wrapped in paper when sold, a possible reference to open container laws), Deckard is afterwards shown drinking it from a shot glass.
- In 2004 film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Kate Winslet can be seen drinking a bottle of Tsingtao beer with Jim Carrey in a Chinese restaurant.
- The 2008 American drama film Gran Torino, directed by, produced by and starring Clint Eastwood, features Clint Eastwood drinking Tsingtao beer at a party thrown by Hmong neighbors.
- In The Crow an empty bottle of Tsingtao beer is seen in the bathroom scene where Brandon Lee confronts Darla and her boyfriend.
- In the Scrubs episode "My New God" J.D. is tricked by Janitor into robbing a Chinese couple's apartment. When they are resting from 'helping Janitor move', they can be seen drinking Tsingtao beer.
- In the 1984 science fiction novel Neuromancer by William Gibson, a plastic ashtray branded with Tsingtao Beer is mentioned in a scene taking place in the bar The Chatsubo.
- One of the recurring characters in Saturday Night Live Korea's "Global Weekend" sketch is a Chinese reporter promoting Tsingtao.
See also
References
- 1 2 公司简介. Official website of Tsingtao Brewery (in Chinese). Retrieved 1 December 2015.
- ↑ "China Beer" (PDF). Retrieved 2013-06-13.
- ↑ Alcoholic Beverages in China - Industry Profile by datamonitor.com
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Matzat, Wilhelm (May 2003). "Germania Brauerei und ihre Angestellten 1903-1914" [Germania Brewery and its Employees]. tsingtau.org (in German). Wilhelm Matzat. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
- ↑ Politisches Archiv des Auswärtiges Amt, R 85 365 (in German) [Political Archives of the Foreign Office, R 85 365]
- ↑ Anheuser-Busch InBev to Sell Minority Stake in Tsingtao to Asahi (PDF). Retrieved 2013-06-13.
- ↑ "Tsingtao Lager History". Tsingtaobeer.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
- ↑ "Profile: Tsingtao Brewery". Thechinaperspective.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
- ↑ Yang, Zhiguo (April 2007). "This Beer Tastes Really Good': Nationalism, Consumer Culture and Development of the Beer Industry in Qingdao, 1903-1993". The Japanese Historical Review 14 (1): 29–58.
External links
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