SYDNEY - As demand for a cleansing ale collapses with the closure of clubs and hotels to combat the spread of the coronavirus, Australia's craft brewers are refocusing on the urgent public need for clean hands.
Australia's medicines regulator changed its rules on Monday (March 30) to make it easier for small brewers and distillers to make hospital-grade hand sanitiser, citing high demand from rural hospitals and aged care homes.
Sanitiser is one of the items that have been stripped from supermarket shelves as the public stock up on protection against the highly contagious virus.
The rule changes mean that distilleries will not need government approval to make sanitiser if they use one of two recipes developed by the World Health Organisation.
Health Minister Greg Hunt said that would not only ease supply pressures, but provide opportunities for Australian businesses to diversify at a difficult time.
"Wineries and grape growers affected by smoke damage caused by the recent bush fires, and boutique distilleries that have lost passing tourist trade, are turning to manufacturing alcohol, the key ingredient in sanitisers," he said in a statement.
Microbrewery One Drop regularly drew a crowd at its Sydney taproom to sip on its international award winning beer before last week's compulsory shutdown of pubs and restaurants.
"All that momentum we had is gone," said head brewer Nick Calder-Scholes, who switched off the beer fermentation taps on Monday.
"All our tanks are empty. We won't produce any more beer, it's a waste. We will use our expertise to help make hand sanitiser," he said.
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Mr Calder-Scholes said the whole industry was working together to shift gear. The supplier of fruit for One Drop's Peach Sour beer will instead supply sugar for ethanol. "None of us have done this before but the craft brewery industry are all in this together."
One Drop was unable to source 500ml bottles in Australia as more companies pile into the market and so it will bottle 200ml hand sanitiser to sell for A$10 (S$9).
Mr Martin Svehla of gin distiller Banks and Solander said he has been receiving constant phone calls from skincare brands seeking ethanol, and has switched to distilling alcohol for hand sanitiser.
The relaxation in regulations "definitely helps", Mr Svehla said. "By far the biggest market is the general consumer, and this frees up supply for healthcare workers."
Manufacturers must test alcohol in each batch and maintain production records, the regulator said.
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