Australia’s best known beer is set to relaunch a brand that’s become foreign to Aussies.
Believe it or not, finding Foster’s beer in Australia – what international drinkers think of as the country’s beer of choice – isn’t easy. In its proverbial homeland, the Southern Cross-spangled cans elude shop shelves and, in 2015, just 10 venues across the entire country poured it on tap.
But the brand that promoted Australia’s laidback drinking culture to the world has decided to relaunch locally, upping production in Melbourne by 300% in the coming months.
The brewer Carlton and United Breweries, now owned by Japanese behemoth Asahi, will target hip-pocket nerves, going after low-cost competitors. Thirty cans of Foster’s will retail at $53, compared to Lion’s XXXX Gold at $42.95 and CUB’s own Victoria Bitter at $59.99.
Today, the 132-year-old pale lager, which Asahi acquired from Anheuser-Busch InBev earlier this year, is distributed across Europe, the US and the UK, where it’s the nation’s second most-popular brew.
Despite being brewed in Manchester, UK ads still feature Australian accents, sand and sun, with slogans like “beaut coldies” and “here’s to a bonza weekend”.
The international history of Foster’s dates back to 1888, when two Irish-American brothers began brewing in Melbourne. Predated by Cascade in 1824, Coopers in 1862 and Carlton in 1864, it wasn’t Australia’s first. But its debut UK campaign in 1971 synonymised Foster’s with local brewing when Barry Humphries defined it as “Australian for beer” on UK TV screens.
In the 1980s the Crocodile Dundee actor Paul Hogan, who was also spearheading campaigns for Australian tourism at the time, became the international sweetheart for “the liquid lifesaver”, winning British affections as the cheeky, sun-kissed Aussie stereotype.
While the relaunch won’t be campaign-driven, CUB’s head of classic brands, Hayden Turner, says it’s a brand Australians know and trust, and that he’s confident its popularity can grow again.“The Covid-19 pandemic has led Aussies to embrace nostalgia and yearn for simpler times,” says Turner.
But with mainstream beers on the decline, it’s a gamble. Australia’s craft beer industry is worth over $800m and grew 6.2% from 2015-2020, according to Ibis World, while Australia’s beer manufacturing industry as a whole declined 1.8% in the same time period. Ibis World attributes this drop to consumers increasingly swapping “traditional beers, such as Victoria Bitter, to higher priced premium and craft beers”.
This won’t be the first time CUB has successfully plugged nostalgia. In 2018 it forayed into fashion with Victoria Bitter and Melbourne Bitter merchandise lines including green cord caps and T-shirts sporting old-school logos. In July this year it also brought back Reschs “Silver Bullet” cans, after they were replaced with bottles in 2005, thanks to a long-running campaign by the Reschs Appreciation Society.
Jack Stutfield, art director at Mr Simple, the Melbourne label that produced the Melbourne Bitter line, says despite the fact that many of their consumers won’t have drunk from cans with the 1970s logos, the line has been incredibly popular.
“It went gangbusters – it sold out in a day,” he says, citing a growing trend among young people towards vintage Australiana. “Especially not being able to travel, people are really supporting more Australian stuff.”
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