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Thursday, April 25
The Indiana Daily Student

Beer in aluminum bottles on the way

PITTSBURGH -- How much would you pay for a bottle of beer that stays cold nearly an hour longer?\nPittsburgh Brewing Co., maker of Iron City Beer, is asking an additional $1 per case.\nThe brewery has partnered with Alcoa Inc., the world's largest aluminum maker, to produce aluminum bottles that keep beer colder for as much as 50 minutes longer, Alcoa officials said.\nAbout 20,000 cases of the new aluminum bottle beer are en route to as many as 28 states and should be on shelves this week, Alcoa and Pittsburgh Brewing said Tuesday.\nThe bottles have three times the aluminum of a typical beer can. That gives them superior insulation, Alcoa spokesman Kevin Lowery said.\nIt's not the first time Alcoa has teamed up with the local brewery to put out a new product. In 1962, the two put the first pull-tab beer cans on shelves, freeing beer drinkers of the need to carry openers with them.\n"We think it's much better than a can and as good or better than glass," said Joe Piccirilli, vice chairman for Pittsburgh Brewing. "There's no doubt in my mind that this has the same potential as the pull tab we did with Alcoa."\nIron City wants to expand sales. But the aluminum bottle may be more important to Alcoa. The aluminum giant wants to win back a share of the market it lost to beer bottles -- both glass and plastic -- which are now common at sporting events nationwide.\nAbout 40 percent of all beer consumed comes out of cans, 43 percent from bottles and 8 percent from the tap, according to the Beer Institute, which tracks industry trends. Bottles, however, have gained ground over the past decade.\nPlastic bottles make up only 0.5 percent of all beer sales, according to the Beer Institute. But having aluminum bottles at sporting events would introduce the product to thousands who might buy a case for home.\nPittsburgh Brewing said it won't drop glass bottles or cans from production.\nSome people say they can taste the difference between beer in cans and bottles.\nLew Bryson, author of two books on breweries, said those complaints are psychological, since the aluminum is coated. But, he said, there may be a lingering taste when the seal of an aluminum can is broken.\nThe aluminum bottle could eliminate that, he said.\nOne microbrewery based in Missoula, Mont., has been using aluminum bottles. Heineken released a limited edition aluminum bottle last year.\nAluminum bottles also have proven successful for a few breweries in Japan, but Iron City is the first company in North America to ship the bottles nationally, company officials said.\nAlcoa and brewery officials say the biggest selling point of the bottle may be its appearance.\nBryson agreed and said plastic bottles have also been problematic at some bottling plants because they are lighter than glass and can become jumbled.\nBut he said the advantages may not outweigh the price.\n"It seems a bit like an answer in search of a question," he said.\nPittsburgh Brewing said aluminum bottles cost more than twice the cost of glass -- about a nickel more per beer -- but Alcoa and the brewery said the cost will come down if other beer companies follow suit.\nPittsburgh Brewing, which sells about 6 million cases of beer annually, has opened a six-figure marketing campaign to try to make the idea stick.\n"I think in the next 12 to 18 months, more people are going to get into this like we are," said Piccirilli. "We're not kicking the tires"

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