Skip to main content | Skip to navigation menu
|Home
Contact Norman at:
Norman Baker,
23 East Street,
Lewes,
East Sussex,
BN7 2LJ.
Tel: (01273) 480281.
Fax: (01273) 480287.
Email: info
This website has been partly paid for from the funds made available to every MP to assist them in communicating with and representing their constituents.
Printed and hosted by Pipex Communications UK Ltd, Humber Buildings, Humber Rd, Beeston, Notts, NG9 2ET. Published and promoted by Norman Baker MP, House of Commons, Westminster, London SW1A 1AA. The views expressed are those of Norman Baker, not of the service provider.
Local Lib Dem MP, Norman Baker, has criticised the government’s lack of support for successful independent breweries like local Lewes brewery, Harvey’s, by giving his backing to an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons calling for the extension of Small Breweries Relief.
The Motion calls on the Government to extend the relief which small breweries, those producing up to 60,000 hectolitres, are eligible for to all independent breweries producing up to 200,000 hectolitres. This move would bring Britain in line with other EU countries, most of which offer considerably more support to their independent breweries.
Local brewery, Harvey’s of Lewes, produces approximately 62,000-63,000 hectolitres of beer each year and produced a record 38,000 barrels of beer in 2005. This output means that Harvey’s lies just outside the category of small brewers currently eligible for relief.
Commenting on the EDM, Norman Baker says:
"It is disappointing that the government isn’t giving independent breweries in this country the same amount of support that independent breweries in other parts of the EU receive. The current system puts Harvey’s, our excellent local brewery, at an unfair disadvantage. Harvey’s is now too successful in terms of output to be eligible for the relief available to small breweries but isn’t big enough to compete with the large brewers who enjoy greater economies of scale.
"I hope that the government will now look to change the current system of relief to ensure that greater support is available for medium-sized, independent breweries who specialise in producing good quality, traditional, beer. It would be a great shame if this lack of assistance from the government were to damage the prospects of independent breweries and lead to a further reduction in the variety of real English ale available."