Brick Lane achieves B Corp certification

Brick Lane achieves B Corp certification

Brick Lane Brewing becomes a B Corp, sets sights on True Zero brewing by 2025

We are proud to announce we have become B Corp Certified, making us one of the few brewing companies in Australia to hold the global standard.

B Corp Certification is a designation made by the US-based not-for-profit B Lab to applicant organisations that can demonstrate high standards of positive social and environmental impact.

Becoming a B Corp is an important milestone in our business strategy, since being founded in 2018, to drive leadership in sustainable beer production among independent brewers in Australia, and to make our operations carbon-free by 2025.

Our recent $50 million investment into our state-of-the-art facility in Melbourne was purpose-designed to minimise the environmental footprint in an industry that has traditionally been highly water and energy intensive.

In the space of four years, Brick Lane has built one of the fastest-growing beer portfolios in Australia with brands including Brick Lane, Sunsetter Ginger Beer and the award-winning Sidewinder No Alcohol beers. We also operate one of the largest partner-brewing businesses in Australia with a focus on supporting and developing existing and new third-party brands.

Brick Lane Managing Director, Paul Bowker, said B Corp Certification validated the sustainability path Brick Lane had pursued since producing its first can of beer in 2018.

“Sustainability is no longer a negotiable for any organisation that wants to be taken seriously and, from day one, Brick Lane has benchmarked itself against the highest standards of environmental and social impact. Becoming a B Corp shows we are on the right track,” Paul said.

“Embedding sustainability throughout brewing operations is a journey of continuous improvement and our ambitions go above and beyond the rigorous requirements of B Corp Certification,” he said.

“Ultimately we’re working toward eliminating carbon emissions entirely from beer production by 2025 and by doing so, leading the way for other independent brewers.”

Initiatives undertaken by Brick Lane in recent years, and acknowledged in the B Corp Certification process, include:

  • Reducing the ratio of water used to beer produced by 40% to 3.7:1 in 2022 versus the 2019 baseline of 6.1:1.
  • Using only fully recyclable packaging across all Brick Lane and partner brands
  • Reducing both the electricity and natural gas consumed per unit of beer produced by more than half since 2019. Sourcing all CO2 used in brewing from sustainable fermentation-derived sources rather than from natural gas, ammonia or other fossil fuels.
  • Moving from artificial to natural refrigerants, eliminating greenhouse gas and ozone depletion potential from refrigeration gasses.
  • Directing spent grain – the largest waste product in brewing – to farmers in the Greater Melbourne area for use as animal feed. Brick Lane currently diverts 99.3% of solid waste generated away from landfill.

“Our talented, dedicated team at Brick Lane deserve credit for their commitment and ingenuity in driving the improvements made to date. But the work doesn’t stop – B Corp Certification is a continuous process and like all B Corps we are accountable for our ongoing performance against its benchmarks,” Paul continues.

“We’re now focused squarely on eliminating carbon emissions from our operations and the electricity we consume to achieve ‘true zero’ brewing. Among other things, that will be supported by significant investment in renewable energy to drive production.”

This year, Brick Lane commenced installation of a 375kW solar project at the Melbourne site, the largest of any independent brewer in Australia. The system will supply 27% of Brick Lane’s energy requirements and save 374 tonnes of annual CO2 emissions – the equivalent of 81 cars off the road. By the end of 2023, Brick Lane expects to be using 100% renewable electricity, to have reduced fugitive CO2 emissions by 50% and to be certified carbon neutral.

To become a B Corp, applicant organisations must exceed benchmarks for social and environmental performance, make a legal commitment to changing their governance structure to be accountable to a wide range of stakeholders, and agree to report publicly on their ongoing performance against B Corp benchmarks.

Brick Lane has amended its company constitution to align with the B Corp movement’s requirement that B Corps take into account the impact of their business operations on a wide range of stakeholders.

Brick Lane has become a recognised leader in the production of no and low alcohol (NoLo) beer, which is now one of the fastest-growing drinks categories in Australia. In July, Brick Lane released consumer research revealing that a third of Australians currently consume NoLo beer, with most survey respondents saying they also expect to increase their consumption of NoLo drinks, including beer.

As well as its own Sidewinder NoLo beer range, Brick Lane also exclusively brews a number of highly awarded NoLo beers, including the popular Heaps Normal no-alcohol beer.

Brick Lane has recently launched a warehouse and logistics business in a new 5,000 square metre facility allowing it to store and deliver beers direct from its site to customers and consumers, creating a vertically integrated brewing production, distribution, wholesale and hospitality business. The investment in direct trucking of finished beer will eliminate an estimated 880 truck movements per year from Brick Lane’s supply chain.