Cask Brewing Systems Debuts Self-Refilling Beer Can (Video)

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From
Cask Brewing Systems:

(Calgary, Alberta) – On April 1, Cask Brewing Systems, the North American

creator of the first microcanning equipment and a leading innovator in canned

craft beer, is announcing the release of its new Self-Refilling Beer Can (SRBC).

The SRBC is a unique Cask invention that enables consumers to refill empty

beer cans with the beer that was originally packaged in the SRBC.

A video detailing the creation and features of the Self-Refilling Beer Can is at

http://youtu.be/5vx1HEzarLg on Youtube.

The can has the potential to significantly change the canned craft beer segment.

“We’ve been providing innovative equipment to craft brewers since the 1980s,”

says Cask president and founder Peter Love. “We’ve also been helping craft

canners since 2002. But this may be the most innovative thing we’ve ever done.”

“For years,” Love says, “we’ve touted the fact that aluminum cans are infinitely

recyclable. Now we can say they are infinitely refillable.”
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The can was developed at Cask’s brewing research laboratory with the help of

Professor Phelyx, a Denver, Colorado microcanning scientist.

“This can has incredible benefits for craft brewers,” Phelyx says. “The Self-Refilling Beer Can allows breweries to increase their beer production without

having to actually produce more beer.”

To create the SRBC, Phelyx and Cask experts first created a unique resealing

mechanism called the Lid Occlusion Lock (LOL) that reseals an opened can

when the consumer gently rubs the can’s opening with their finger.

Once the lid is resealed, the beer drinker then lightly shakes the can to activate

the In-Can Brewing System (ICBS) that then “rebrews” the original beer

that was packaged in the can.

“Perfecting the ICBS was the crucial step in creating the Self-Refilling Beer Can,”

Phelyx notes. “Once we were able to make that work, the Self-Refilling Beer Can

went from a dream to a reality.”

In addition to providing a lifetime of craft beer to consumers, the SRBC has other

benefits.

“It will quickly shrink the packaging costs for our customers,” says Cask’s Jamie

Gordon, “and eliminate any waste from dented cans prior to filling. It could

eliminate the need for beer can recycling, too.”

The initial response from retailers to the SRBC has not been favorable. “The lost

sales alone would be devastating to my industry,” says Ron Vaughn, of Denver,

Colorado’s Argonaut Wine & Liquor. “We don’t want to see it in the market.”

To address these concerns, Cask is developing a royalty system that will

compensate retailers for any losses from the SRBC.

Cask officials are releasing the first samples of the SRBC to the craft brewing

industry on Tuesday, April 1.

Cask officials are not divulging the price of the cans.

Cask Brewing Systems invented the beer industry’s first microcanning equipment

in 2002. Cask now supplies a range of affordable, compact, high-performance

canning systems to small-scale breweries and packagers worldwide.

Cask has installed over 300 canning lines in 20 countries, and is the official

supplier of Ball Corporation printed aluminum cans for its Cask customers. ;)
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