Earth Day

Here’s how Massachusetts breweries are going green

The MBG and the Eco-Friendly Beer Drinker support sustainability efforts with a two-year grant from the EPA.

Rob Vandenabeele lives every day like it’s Earth Day. 

Cofounder of the local blog Mass. Brew Bros. and a longtime public school teacher, Vandenabeele has combined his love for craft beer and the environment in a new way. After earning a certificate in Sustainability from Harvard Extension School, Vandenabeele—aka the Eco-Friendly Beer Drinker—is now the field manager of a grant-funded program helping Massachusetts breweries prevent waste and reduce their energy usage, in collaboration with the Massachusetts Brewers Guild and UMass Boston’s Center for Sustainable Enterprise and Regional Competitiveness.

Since October, Vandenabeele has visited 19 Bay State breweries and counting, to show small businesses how they can become greener—and save money in the process. Thanks to a Pollution Prevention Grant funded by the Environmental Protection Agency, Vandenabeele’s expertise is available to any Massachusetts brewery for at least the next 18 months, at no cost to business owners. Vandenabeele can come in to assess a brewery’s operations, and make recommendations about ways it could become more efficient. He’ll connect business owners with networks and resources to help them achieve their sustainability goals.

“It takes time. It takes effort. It takes knowledge,” Vandenabeele says, and he understands small business owners are already stretched thin. “Why the EPA gave us this grant is because we can go into a business” and inform them about their many options.

These days, due to the state’s ban on organic waste, breweries are likely already recycling their spent grains. They’re probably already collecting and reusing PakTechs. But what are some other ways this industry can become more environmentally friendly? 

Well, Vandenabeele is glad you asked.

Harnessing Renewable Energy

You don’t have to install your own solar panels or wind turbines to use renewable energy. Vandenabeele understands that infrastructural upgrades can be cost prohibitive, or even impossible for some breweries that don’t own their own facilities. 

There are some that are doing it, of course:

  • Barrington Brewery and Restaurant was the first in Massachusetts to invest in an on-site solar array. 

  • Riverwalk Brewing in Newburyport leases space in a large building with a 500-kilowatt solar array on the roof and also has a wind turbine. The brewery draws 100% of the energy it uses from on-site renewables.

  • 7th Wave Brewing in Medfield owns its own building (which also houses 10 other businesses, including a distillery and a sake brewery). A 500-kilowatt solar array on the roof produces more power than the building uses—so not only does the brewery not have an electricity bill to pay, but it actually collects a check each month from Eversource.

But those are examples of the gold standard. Vandenabeele wants every brewery (and private citizen!) to know about how easy it can be to invest in renewable energy through purchase power agreements.

With a PPA, customers buy electricity from a third-party contractor, which works with other providers of renewable energy—be it solar, wind, hydro, etc. “Someone else is doing all the work” to set up the source of power, Vandenabeele explains, while the brewery’s electricity-bill money is, “in essence, going to increase the infrastructure for renewable power.”

For developers of renewable power sources, it can be lucrative, because federal and state governments are incentivizing purchase power agreements. But PPAs can also save money for energy users. Amherst Brewing Company’s five Hangar Pub restaurants, Coastal Mass. Brewing Co., Exhibit ‘A’ Brewing Co., Fieldcrest Brewing Co., Lost Shoe Brewing & Roasting Co., Moby Dick Brewing Co., and Pioneer Valley Brewing Co., have all tied to community solar through associate member of the MBG, East Coast Renewable Energy. Participants are expected to save 10% on their electric bills through the program. 

There's no investment required whatsoever to participate in a PPA—and in fact, most agreements offer a discount because of the environmental benefits. Check out the state’s website about purchase power agreements to learn about the options, or get in touch with East Coast Renewable Energy for a free evaluation. 

Reducing Organic Waste

Until the U.S. tackles the problem of food waste—which sees nearly 40% end up in landfills annually—Vanguard Renewables is stepping in with a solution. 

The Agawam-based company collects organic waste such as spent grains, food scraps, and even out-of-code beer and turns it into methane gas, which can be used for energy, through a controlled process called anaerobic digestion. If this waste ends up in a landfill, it also becomes methane, which is a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to increased atmospheric warming and climate change. 

An associate member of the MBG, Vanguard Renewables is already working with numerous Massachusetts breweries, including Berkshire Brewing Company, Riverwalk, Jack’s Abby, Tree House, Wachusett Brewing, and White Lion. In 2022, the company recycled nearly 11,000 tons of brewery waste, mitigating about 6,350 tons of carbon dioxide. That’s equivalent to planting more than 100,000 trees. The renewable energy produced by anaerobically digesting that waste is capable of fueling a city bus for over 1,000,000 miles, according to Vanguard.

While methane gas is still a fossil fuel, harnessing it in a controlled way, from rescued organic waste, is a more environmentally friendly source of it than fracking is, Vandenabeele notes.

Sourcing Local Ingredients

Supporting your local brewery feels great—but how local is that beer, really? In reality, the grain base probably grew in the Midwest or Canada, and the hops were likely flown in from the Pacific Northwest. “There are substantial emissions involved with that delivery,” Vandenabeele says.

Using locally grown ingredients achieves two major goals: One, it cuts down on greenhouse gas emissions associated with shipping materials, and two, it supports the local economy. More demand for New England-grown ingredients “creates new opportunities for local farmers to consider a whole new crop,” Vandenabeele says.

CraftRoots Brewing is unique in sourcing all the malt it uses from New England craft maltsters, as well as the majority of its hops from a family farm in Western Mass. Redemption Rock in Worcester, the first Massachusetts craft brewery to become a certified B Corp; Wormtown, Lamplighter, Trillium, and Exhibit ‘A’ Brewing Co. have also all produced exclusively local products.

“They’re putting their money where their mouth is,” he says. “If you’re a farmer thinking about growing barley or wheat, you need to have an end-market to sell it to. So if Lamplighter says, ‘We’ll take as much as we can get from you,’ that’s huge.”

The Northeast Grainshed Alliance was founded in 2020 to increase demand for Northeast grains. It promotes networking and collaboration between local growers, processors, and makers; and it increases understanding about the value of regional grains through various communications and policy advocacy strategies. The SQFT Project, for example, is a tool makers can use to calculate the square footage of farmland involved in making a product, and features a logo signifying the product’s commitment.

“For consumers, you should buy that beer if you care about the environment,” Vandenabeele says. If a beer touts 100% local hops or malt—even a one-time, special release—“that’s serious dedication by that brewery.”

Creating a sustainable culture

Portico Brewing, which recently opened its first taproom in Somerville after years as a contract brand, has hit the ground running with plans for sustainability, says Vandenabeele, who helped the company apply for and receive a grant from the state Department of Environmental Protection. The MassDEP Reduce, Reuse, Repair Micro-Grant provides recipients up to $5,000 to establish waste reduction projects. Portico is using its grant to help pay for reusable silverware, plates, bowls, trays, and stainless steel cups for its taproom and in-house kitchen, in an effort to have zero waste. 

The new brewery at Boynton Yards is also working to become a certified bike-friendly business, and is establishing partnerships with local conservation groups like the Charles River Watershed Association, the Somerville Urban Forestry Division, and the Great Massachusetts Cleanup. Portico also has its sights set on becoming the first Massachusetts brewery to become a member of 1% For the Planet, a non-profit organization that encourages all kinds of businesses to donate a percent of gross sales to environmental causes.

Sure, Portico has the clean slate of its first brick-and-mortar—but well-established breweries can make these changes, too. Vandenabeele, the MBG, and our partners at UMass Boston are excited to show you how.

To learn more and set up a sustainability evaluation at your brewery, email the Eco-Friendly Beer Drinker today. Happy Earth Day!

Just One Tenth of Plastic Can Carriers Get Re-Used Or Recycled in Massachusetts

A Team of Eco-Minded Breweries and
Environmental Groups Want to Change That

Can carrier collection sign.png

PR / Massachusetts (April, 2021) — It’s estimated* that at least 10 million new plastic can carriers are used annually by breweries in Massachusetts, with just 10% of them being collected and re-used, and less than 2% of them ever getting recycled. As a result, the amount of plastic beer packaging waste ending up in landfills each year is enough to fill any of the state’s largest breweries with discarded carriers rather than beer. 

A number of factors have combined to create a perfect storm in which carriers end up in the hands of consumers who pitch them into their curbside recycling bins because manufacturers market them as “100% recyclable.” But the state’s RecycleSmart website, an initiative of the Massachusetts department of Environmental Protection (DEP), and its three largest waste disposal companies (Casella, Republic, and Waste Management) all say that plastic carriers and six-pack rings are incompatible with sorting equipment. As a result, they get rejected and sent to landfill or incineration, both of which have negative impacts on the environment. 

The problem is exacerbated if brewery owners or taproom employees aren’t aware of the issue either. Even when informed of the fate of plastic can carriers, breweries and their customers have often had no practical way to dispose of them. For a deep dive on the conundrum of trying to recycle plastic can carriers, read noted national beer writer Dave Infante’s recent story for Vine Pair, “The Plastic PakTech Paradox.”

Starting in late April, the founder of EcoFriendlyBeer.com is launching an initiative to raise awareness about the problem, provide a variety of solutions that consumers and breweries can utilize, and significantly increase the state-wide rate of re-use and proper recycling of plastic carriers and rings. The Mass Brewers Guild (MBG) supports the idea, which it believes has the potential to make a real difference while sending a powerful message that the craft brewing industry wants to do business sustainably and do right by the environment. And the Mass. Brew Bros. are taking their support a step further, kicking off a social media campaign to challenge the state’s craft beer drinkers to rescue a million or more beer carriers by the end of 2021.

To help consumers meet the challenge, Eco-Friendly Beer and the Mass. Brew Bros. have partnered with GreenLabs Recycling on an innovative collection and recycling program that will start up in Metro Boston in early May. GreenLabs currently provides the only plastic recycling collection service of its kind for labs in academia and industry, and will soon make it available to four of Greater Boston’s popular breweries: the Harpoon Beer Hall in South Boston, Lamplighter Brewing in Cambridge, Mighty Squirrel Brewing in Waltham, and at Trillium Brewing’s Seaport and Fenway locations. The pilot program will ensure that collected can carriers actually get to a plastics processor, something that’s yet to be done in Massachusetts. Once there, they will go through a grinder and eventually get used as raw material for other plastic products.

In collaboration with RecyclingWorks, an assistance program funded by Mass DEP that helps businesses and institutions reduce waste and maximize recycling, breweries outside of the Metro Boston area will also have a recycling option if they’re willing to consolidate larger quantities and do the hauling themselves. Stockbridge Plastics will accept a full gaylord box (which holds about 12,000 carriers), but it must be delivered to their facility in West Boylston through a prior arrangement.

For the can carrier re-use and recycling initiative to have the most impact, breweries and beer stores will need to embrace corporate social responsibility (CSR) and replicate best practices developed by breweries such as Stone Cow in Barre, which began its full-scale re-use program in 2018 and has since packaged some 200,000 cans in sanitized and re-used carriers. Another is Untold Brewing in Scituate, which in 2020 re-used more carriers than any brewery in the state, some 29,000 (resulting in a savings of nearly $3,000 in annual packaging costs).

Cooperation will also need to come from the state’s larger breweries, for which re-use programs may not be practical due to automated application equipment and significantly higher production volume. Exhibit ‘A’ Brewing in Framingham doesn’t re-use, but has collected enough carriers through its take-back program to start offering them to smaller breweries who do. Such donation models could become common practice, especially for breweries with busy taprooms where high collection volumes are possible. Such an effort could significantly increase the percentage of beer currently being packaged with re-used carriers, saving small breweries money in the process.

If collections exceed donation demand, or when carriers are damaged and no longer usable, breweries should then turn to recycling. Greater Good Imperial Brewing in Worcester has an arrangement with its packaging provider to send specified quantities of collected and broken carriers back to the provider’s warehouse. When enough are gathered there, they can eventually be sent off to a recycling processor.

Informal can carrier take-back programs currently exist at more than a third of the state’s 200 breweries, but most only collect enough to package a portion of their beer with them. The most successful programs have actively promoted their efforts through social media and provided specific details to customers on which type or color they can re-use. Beer stores, too, can join the re-use and recycling efforts. Craft Beer Cellar in Belmont, one of the first to allow four and six-packs to be separated for sales of single cans and mix-packs, allows customers to return carriers to its store and has collaborated with breweries like Untold that are willing to re-use them.

When informed, and given the opportunity, many in the craft beer community do the right thing with their used can carriers. More work must be done, however, to raise awareness on how the craft beer community can improve the current re-use and recycling rate of just 10%. Use the map below to see where plastic can carriers can be turned in and given a second life in your area.

For more information regarding proper can carrier and ring recycling, refer to EcoFriendlyBeer.com’s Can Carrier Recycling Fact Sheet. For guidance on starting or improving a re-use or recycling program, reference the Can Carrier Re-Use and Recycling Best Practices document. For any other questions, or for help navigating any of the program logistics contact Rob at ecofriendlybeerdrinker@gmail.com or MassBrewBros@gmail.com.

*Estimates for can carrier use, re-use and recycling were calculated using data collected by the Mass. Brew Bros. through correspondences with Massachusetts breweries, officials from recycling groups, and the state’s largest waste management companies. The 10 million figure doesn’t include beer purchased in Massachusetts from out-of-state breweries. When those figures are included the total number of can carriers entering the waste stream is significantly higher.

About Eco-Friendly Beer Drinker

Rob Vandenabeele, an avid gardener, biker, nature lover and beer industry blogger, founded the EcoFriendlyBeer.com website in early 2020. Currently enrolled in the Environmental Studies program at the Harvard Extension School, his goal is to inspire people to better protect our earth, the only planet with craft beer. You can follow him on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram at @EcoFriendlyBeer.

About GreenLabs Recycling

GreenLabs Recycling collects and recycles empty pipette tip boxes, refillable wafers and other plastic items from research facilities in Greater Boston, providing locally-based, cost effective plastic recycling solutions to help make science sustainable. In late April, it will launch a pilot program to help select breweries in Metro Boston properly recycle plastic can carriers that aren’t accepted for municipal curbside recycling programs.

About RecycleSmartMA

An initiative of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), RecycleSmartMA provides educational resources for residents, customers, students, tenants, co-workers or mothers-in-law to help get the word out about Smart Recycling. Its Recyclopedia widget allows anyone to search hundreds of common items (from paper bags to pizza boxes) to find out if they belong in the recycling bin or elsewhere.

About RecyclingWorks

RecyclingWorks in Massachusetts is a recycling assistance program funded by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection and delivered under contract by the Center for EcoTechnology that helps businesses and institutions reduce waste and maximize recycling, re-use, and food recovery opportunities.