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Brewery expansions reflect global
focus
Anheuser-Busch, Coors revamp
Virginia operations to meet heady competition
by Donna
C. Gregory
for Virginia Business
November 2006
Editor’s note: Virginia
Business takes a close look at the challenges facing
four food and beverage manufacturers that have undergone
recent expansions.
Two of the nation’s top beer-makers are hoping
multimillion dollar expansions at their Virginia breweries
will restore the fizz to an industry that’s gone
flat in recent years.
Anheuser-Busch Cos. Inc. recently completed a five-year,
$200 million modernization and redesign at its Williamsburg
plant while Coors Brewing Co. is in the midst of adding
brewing capability to its packaging plant in Elkton.
That two-year, $250 million project is expected to go
online this March.
"It’s all about dealing with change, and
all companies have to do that," says Brian J. McNelis,
Anheuser-Busch’s senior plant manager in Williamsburg. "We’re
trying to put as much excitement in the brewing industry
as we can."
Meanwhile, Tim Williams, vice
president and plant manager of Coors Brewing Co.’s Elkton plant, says changes
there reflect the company’s efforts to adapt to
a highly competitive market. "This allows us to
reduce our costs of production and distribution," he
says.
In recent years, domestic beer sales have stagnated
in the face of competition from wine, distilled spirits
and imported beer. The Beer Institute, an industry trade
group, reports that per capita beer consumption among
U.S. adults has dropped slightly, from 30.6 gallons to
30 gallons a year, since 2003.
In the face of these market conditions,
companies such as Anheuser-Busch are trying to create
global brands. "Most
people don’t think of a brewery as internationally
competitive, but it is because of imports and consolidation
in the industry," says Brett Vassey, president and
CEO of the Virginia Manufacturers Association.
Anheuser-Busch and Coors are
expanding their Virginia facilities in order to streamline
operations and offer consumers more choice. "They reflect a common theme:
Manufacturers who have gone from a labor-intensive model
to a technology-intensive model," says Vassey. "[Many
beer companies] are transforming themselves in that way – just
to compete. It’s a constant investment in innovation
and trying to keep or grow their market share."
Anheuser-Busch
With its modernization project, Anheuser-Busch’s
Williamsburg plant can now brew, package and ship more
than 200 brand and container combinations including the
company’s star sellers: Budweiser, Michelob and
Bud Light. "The brewing process has not changed,
[but] technology allows us to manage that process much
more effectively," says McNelis. "The beer
brewing, packaging and shipping process [is] all connected
through technology."
The modernization included the addition of a state-of-the-art
brewing control room, three high-speed bottle lines with
quick change parts that allow for easy conversion between
brands and containers, and a new learning center to train
employees to operate the more automated systems.
In addition to streamlining production, the modernization
also has allowed Anheuser-Busch to cut its work force.
The plant now employs about 900 employees compared with
1,000 before the project.
"It made us much more efficient from a cost point
of view, and it enabled us to manage the complexity that
customers demand. Our customers today want more choices
than ever before," says McNelis. "Product conception
to marketplace is much quicker today. The modernization/redesign
has already accomplished what we intended it to do."
One of the Williamsburg plant’s greatest challenges
as it becomes more automated will be the same one faced
by other manufacturers: finding skilled employees to
replace experienced workers who retire. "The numbers
of candidates entering [manufacturing] are not equal
to the number leaving," says McNelis.
To ensure a steady stream of qualified electrical and
instrumentation technicians and computer controllers,
the Williamsburg plant is partnering with Thomas Nelson
Community College to begin a maintenance technician development
program that will combine both classroom and on-the-job
training.
Anheuser-Busch has also developed
a new on-site training program through the plant’s
learning center where employees can become certified
to run specific line equipment.
"We’ve certified that process and now we
know each employee gets trained the same way," says
McNelis.
Coors Brewing Co.
When Coors finishes adding a brewery to its beer packaging
facility in Elkton, the plant will be able to brew
6 million to 7 million barrels of beer annually, roughly
matching the Rockingham County facility’s packaging
capacity. Like Anheuser-Busch’s project, the
new brewing installation will be highly automated,
says Williams. "Other operations will effectively
remain the same."
But, despite adding an entirely new production process
to the plant, Williams estimates that its work force
of more than 400 workers will grow by only 10 percent.
Coors hasn’t had any difficulty in finding qualified
workers to fill new positions. It’s already finished
hiring for its brewing operation, reports Diana Jennings,
plant communications manager. "All of the new brewing
positions were filled with people who were currently
employed by Coors, and then where we were left with openings,
we were able to pull from a pool of interested applicants."
However, the Elkton plant will
have to look outside of the Shenandoah Valley to fill "sensory" positions,
adds Jennings, since beer tasting requires such a specific
skill set.
Adding brewing capability is
part of Coors’ strategy
to reduce its production costs by $5 per barrel over
the next two to three years. "We anticipate that
this build-out will achieve significant savings and financial
returns and bring brewing capacity much closer to our
important East Coast markets and distributors," says
Leo Kiely, president and CEO of Coors. "The build-out
will include two brew lines, fermentation and aging equipment,
a new rail spur and several new structures to house controls
and related processes."
Coors’ decision to expand its Elkton facility
was twofold. "From a transportation point of view,
Elkton is well-centered on the East Coast," says
Williams. "[Another reason] is the quality of the
water that we get from the aquifer here. It emanates
from the mountains. It is pristine and good brewing water."
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