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Caledonian Brewery to go Dutch in 11th hour S&N deal



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Published Date: 11 April 2008
EDINBURGH'S last remaining brewery will come under Dutch ownership by the end of this month following the sale of Scottish & Newcastle to Heineken and Carlsberg.
In a surprise move, the Caledonian brewery has been sold to S&N just weeks ahead of the drinks firm's £7.8 billion acquisition by a the Dutch and Danish consortium, The Scotsman has learned.

S&N, which already had a 30 per cent stake in the firm,
has bought up the remaining 70 per cent shareholding from Caledonian directors Sandy Orr, Donald MacDonald and Denis Critchley-Salmonson for an undisclosed sum.

The deal to sell the company, which makes brands including Deuchars IPA and Caledonian 80, will spell the end of the historic Scottish-owned brewing industry in the capital.

It is understood to have been part of the agreement between Edinburgh-headquartered S&N and the Dutch drinks giant, which is due to take control of the Edinburgh-based S&N at the end of this month.

Caledonian managing director Stephen Crawley, who is to stay on following the takeover by Heineken, yesterday confirmed the deal and said it was "business as usual" for the historic brewery.

He told The Scotsman: "The business has been running on the same basis as it is going to run in the future and it is very much business as usual – essentially is it just a shareholder change."

He said no redundancies were planned but added that "everything was up for debate" in the future. Heineken's takeover of S&N is expected to put about 250 jobs at risk in the brewer's corporate functions, including between 100 and 150 jobs at its Edinburgh HQ.

The Slateford Road brewery's 75 staff were told about the acquisition in an e-mail yesterday afternoon.

One worker said: "Everyone's worried about what will happen. We're concerned for our jobs. This is a big change for the Caley Brewery."

Crawley added: "The mix of public and private ownership has gone and the Caley is a survivor.

"The companies are a good fit."

He maintained that the iconic Deuchars brand was set to survive the takeover.

Crawley said: "I would bet my house that we still have Deuchars in five years' time. When I took over, I wanted Deuchars to be to Edinburgh what Guinness is to Dublin and although we have taken steps in that direction, there is still work to do."

The Caledonian operations, including the sales and marketing functions, will continue to trade as a stand-alone business. S&N said the brewing and packaging operations at Caledonian would have closer links to its own brewing network but added that its commercial operation, brands and marketing activities would be "unaffected" by the acquisition.

S&N added that further investment was planned for the brewery, which has already benefited from £4m of improvements paid for by the bigger company over the past four years.

Jeremy Blood, managing director for S&N UK, added: "Over the last four years, we have built close strategic links with the Caledonian team and had already begun to unlock new opportunities for their beers with the S&N network. This final part of the acquisition will simplify matters and enable Caledonian to fully realise its potential as a significant producer of high quality and specialist traditional ales."

The Caledonian Brewery, which dates back to 1869, struck a deal with S&N in 2004 through which the larger company bought a stake in Caledonian. It has since invested millions of pounds in upgrading the brewery site.

When S&N closed its Fountainbridge brewery, it emphasised that it would retain its Scottish presence through its link with Caledonian.

The foreign takeover of S&N was confirmed last week after shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favour of the deal at a meeting in Edinburgh.

S&N will delist as a public company on 28 April.

Heineken last night refused to comment on the deal.





The full article contains 665 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 10 April 2008 9:07 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

GrahamH,

Edinburgh 11/04/2008 08:22:37
Oviously recognised that an Edinburgh owned brewery would have a following in the area and taking out competition. Directors will have done well from this, but sad they sold out but having worked in service capacity with the brewery in early days they have developed it over years and time to move on perhaps.

Be very difficult now to establish a new local brewery and if production does move to Yorkshire or Berkshire, then local Government should ensure brewery not sold for flats etc.
2

Press,

11/04/2008 08:47:59
This is very bad and very sad.
We can only hope H&C keep the brewery open but it must spell the begining of the end. A sad day indeed.
3

Larry Jotter,

Edinburgh, EH11 11/04/2008 10:36:42
Well, that's that then. Cheerio to Caley Brewery. As others have said, the brands of 80' and Deauchers might continue, in what form though he asked, as some sort of disgusting tasteless mass produced 'lager' no doubt.

But, the actual Brewery itself, no chance, these corporates won't wait a minute to have that sold for a nice profit, knocked down and before you know it, anyone want to buy a pad at 'Caley Heights'.

Very sad, ah well, it was good while it lasted. Mr Craweluy
4

Deighan,

11/04/2008 10:39:55
Probably the worst Stewardship of a Scottish plc
5

Deighan,

11/04/2008 10:41:37
No the bad news will get worse and Reach the parts not even reported yet
6

Deighan,

11/04/2008 10:47:45
But Mr S and his "boys" bank accounts will be "alive and kicking"
7

Deighan,

11/04/2008 10:49:01
They are all "Due a Slagging"
8

11 Ron,

11/04/2008 11:48:52
Wouldn't jump to conclusions. S&N would only have been allowed to buy this with Heineken's permission.

Now it could all be a real estate play but they (the Dutch) will be concerned with alienating a core customer base in Edinburgh.

The key question is whether the brand is SO associated with Edinburgh - like Guinness and Dublin - that it would weaken equity in the brand if production was taken elsewhere.
9

Annoyingboi,

Edinburgh 11/04/2008 13:36:57
BAD BAD news. We are losing Edinburgh bit by bit and no-one seems to be able to do anything about it. Our town is losing its direction and its attraction. Sad
10

Buspass,

Edinburgh 11/04/2008 19:33:41
Money talks. Enjoy your pint when you can - the writing's on the wall, following the platitudes.
11

The Strategist,

11/04/2008 23:19:09
Humiliating really. Two of the planet's largest and most profitable banks are alledgedly headquartered in Edinburgh but it seems they're never really there when you need them. But then one of them is too busy sorting out the Dutch bank it's just bought. Wonder if there's a connection there?

 

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