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CASTLE MALTING NEWS en colaboración con www.e-malt.com Spanish
24 June, 2025



Brewing news Belgium: Trappist brewery Chimay offers three of its beers in cans for the first time

In response to changing beer consumption habits, the renowned Trappist brewery Chimay is offering three of its beers in cans for the first time. This launch coincides with the 175th anniversary of the Abbey of Notre-Dame de Scourmont, where Chimay beer has been brewed since 1862, Belga News Agency reported on June 24.

The Chimay Dorée, Rouge and Triple - ranging in alcohol content from 4.8% to 8% - are now available in 33cl cans. The heavier Bleue and Verte varieties will remain bottled for the time being. “You don’t drink those in just a few gulps,” said CEO Pierre-Louis Dhaeyer.

The abbey has been developing the canned versions for over three years, and has already conducted initial market trials in the United States and Japan, where canned craft beer is far more common.

Although canned beer accounts for around a third of beer consumption in Belgium, this is the first time that a Belgian Trappist beer has been released in this format. Dhaeyer emphasises that the decision goes beyond marketing. Cans offer better protection from light exposure, thus preserving the beer’s quality.

Nevertheless, this also reflects the broader trend of declining beer consumption. Chimay’s production dropped from almost 190,000 hectolitres before the pandemic to 167,000 in 2023. Profits also fell significantly, from €2.8 million in 2022 to just over €800,000 last year. Almost 80% of Chimay's production is consumed domestically.

In Europe, non-alcoholic beer is the only category experiencing growth. But a Trappist beer without alcohol? That’s still a step too far for the monks, who still sit on the brewery's board and remain closely tied to the Abbey of Scourmont, founded in 1850.

Although the brewery has experimented with alcohol-free variants, it has yet to produce one that meets the monks' standards. “We’ll only release it when it’s right,” said Dhaeyer.





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