이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 690개와 수입업체 651개가 색인되어 있습니다.
1,741건의 공급업체·제조사 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
프리미엄 공급업체·제조사 0개와 카탈로그 0건이 현재 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 0건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2024입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-05-23.
무알콜 맥주에 대한 글로벌 공급업체·제조사 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 1,741건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 무알콜 맥주의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
무알콜 맥주 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
무알콜 맥주의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
무알콜 맥주의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 아르헨티나 (-72.6%), 프랑스 (+69.1%), 폴란드 (+48.2%)입니다.
무알콜 맥주 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-06 기준으로 무알콜 맥주 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-11 기준, 노출 가능한 무알콜 맥주 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 프랑스 (4.04 USD / kg), 콜롬비아 (1.64 USD / kg), 남아프리카 (1.46 USD / kg), 이탈리아 (1.34 USD / kg), 우간다 (1.11 USD / kg), 외 12개국입니다.
무알콜 맥주의 원산지-도착지 무역 흐름을 금액, 물량, 점유율 기준으로 분석해 수요 측 소싱 채널을 모니터링하세요.
Classification
Product TypeProcessed Food
Product FormPackaged
Industry PositionFinished Consumer Beverage
Market
Alcohol-free beer is a rapidly expanding segment within beer and the broader no/low-alcohol (NoLo) beverage space, positioned around moderation while retaining beer-style sensory cues. Industrial production is concentrated in large brewing economies, with Europe a major supply base: Eurostat reports EU output of 1.8 billion litres of beer with <0.5% alcohol or no alcohol in 2023 and 2.0 billion litres in 2024. Global momentum remains strong, with IWSR reporting 2024–2025 growth for no-alcohol beer across tracked markets. Cross-border trade is shaped by differences in legal definitions and labeling rules for “non-alcoholic” vs “alcohol-free/0.0%”, increasing compliance and reputational risk for exporters.
Market GrowthGrowing (2024–2025 (multi-market tracking); EU 2023–2024 production trend)Rapid expansion driven by moderation trends and improved NoLo brewing and dealcoholization technologies.
Major Producing Countries
독일Largest EU producer of beer with >0.5% alcohol; EU is also expanding production of beer with <0.5% or no alcohol (Eurostat).
스페인Top-tier EU beer producer; EU output of <0.5%/no-alcohol beer is rising (Eurostat).
폴란드Major EU beer producer; EU output of <0.5%/no-alcohol beer is rising (Eurostat).
네덜란드Major EU beer producer and export hub for beer (Eurostat); relevance to alcohol-free beer trade depends on HS classification used by each market.
벨기에Major EU beer producer with extensive export orientation; relevance to alcohol-free beer trade depends on HS classification used by each market.
Carbonated malt-based beverage with beer-like foam and hop bitterness; color ranges from pale straw to dark depending on style.
Packaged formats mirror mainstream beer (cans, glass bottles; sometimes keg/draft), with oxygen control important for flavour stability.
Compositional Metrics
Alcohol-by-volume (ABV) is the primary compliance metric; labeling thresholds and permitted terms (e.g., “non-alcoholic”, “alcohol free/0.0%”) are jurisdiction-specific.
Residual fermentable sugars and higher residual extract are more common than in standard beer for some NoLo production routes, increasing spoilage sensitivity and sweetness risk.
Grades
Label-claim categories based on ABV and local legal definitions (e.g., “non-alcoholic” with mandated adjacent ABV statement in some jurisdictions; “alcohol free/0.0%” subject to stricter conditions in some jurisdictions).
Buyer specifications commonly focus on ABV compliance, sensory profile (bitterness/aroma), and microbiological stability (especially for draft formats).
Packaging
Single-serve cans (e.g., 330 mL / 355 mL) and glass bottles are common in international retail.
Multipacks for retail and kegs for on-trade exist, with draft/keg formats requiring tighter hygiene and cold-chain control.
ProcessingProduction commonly uses either restricted fermentation (specialty yeasts/controlled fermentation) or post-fermentation dealcoholization (thermal vacuum processes or membrane separation), each with different aroma and flavour-retention trade-offs.Quality management often emphasizes aroma management, oxygen pick-up minimization, and stabilization (pasteurization and/or filtration) due to reduced ethanol-related microbial hurdle.
Consumer moderation and mindful-drinking behaviour, including substitution occasions where beer flavour is desired without (or with minimal) ethanol.
Improved sensory quality as dealcoholization and low-ethanol fermentation techniques mature.
Expanded retail shelf space and on-trade availability in some markets, often adjacent to established beer brands.
Temperature
Finished product is commonly distributed as shelf-stable packaged beverage, but flavour stability benefits from cool storage and protection from heat and sunlight.
Cold-chain and hygiene become more critical for draft/keg and unpasteurized variants due to higher spoilage sensitivity.
Atmosphere Control
CO₂ management (carbonation targets) and low oxygen pick-up during filling are key to limiting oxidative staling in low-ethanol beers.
Shelf Life
Shelf life is strongly influenced by stabilization choice (pasteurization and/or membrane/sterile filtration), packaging oxygen control, and storage temperature; draft/keg formats tend to have higher operational risk.
Risks
Regulatory Compliance HighDefinitions and labeling rules for “non-alcoholic” versus “alcohol free/0.0%” vary by jurisdiction, and some markets require specific adjacent ABV statements. Inconsistent compliance (including trace-alcohol variability versus label claims) can trigger border rejections, recalls, litigation, or delisting, disrupting global trade even when physical supply is available.Maintain market-by-market label and formulation control (including validated ABV testing), align claims to the strictest destination-market rule set, and implement compliant artwork governance for multilingual/export labels.
Food Safety MediumReduced ethanol lowers a key microbial hurdle present in standard beer, while residual sugars can support spoilage organisms; NoLo beers are therefore more susceptible to microbiological contamination incidents if hygiene and stabilization are insufficient.Design a NoLo-specific HACCP plan, apply validated stabilization (pasteurization and/or filtration), and control post-process contamination risk in packaging and draft systems.
Quality And Shelf Life MediumDealcoholization and restricted fermentation can increase oxidation sensitivity and accelerate flavour staling; oxygen pick-up during filling and warm storage conditions can disproportionately degrade sensory quality versus standard beer.Minimize oxygen pick-up (packaging specs and line controls), use appropriate stabilization and cold-chain where needed, and validate shelf life under realistic distribution conditions.
Market Access And Reputation MediumPublic-health stakeholders have raised concerns about consumer misunderstanding of NoLo ethanol content and the potential for alcohol-brand halo effects (placement, branding, marketing) that may influence minors or abstainers, creating policy and reputational exposure for global brands.Adopt transparent ABV communication (including clear “0.0%” versus “<0.5%” distinctions where applicable), strengthen age-appropriate marketing controls, and monitor local policy changes on NoLo advertising and placement.
Sustainability
Energy intensity can increase versus standard beer when post-fermentation dealcoholization is used (added separation step), making decarbonization of brewing operations a salient ESG theme.
Water stewardship and wastewater management remain material across the beer value chain; packaging waste (aluminum/glass) and transport emissions are recurring hotspots.
Labor & Social
Public-health scrutiny of NoLo products: potential for consumer confusion about trace alcohol and concerns about marketing/placement that may reach minors or abstainers.
Regulatory tightening risk for alcohol-adjacent branding, advertising, and health messaging, varying widely by jurisdiction.
FAQ
What does “non-alcoholic” mean on a beer label in the United States?In the U.S., the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) allows the term “non-alcoholic” on malt beverages only when the label includes an immediately adjacent statement that it “contains less than 0.5 percent alcohol by volume.”
How is alcohol-free or non-alcoholic beer typically produced?Common routes include (1) brewing and fermenting beer and then removing ethanol using physical separation methods (e.g., vacuum-based thermal processes or membrane separation such as reverse osmosis), or (2) restricted fermentation approaches using yeasts/conditions that produce very little ethanol. Reviews in the brewing literature describe these methods and their flavour trade-offs.
Why can alcohol-free beer have higher spoilage or stability risk than regular beer?Scientific reviews on no/low-alcohol beers note that lowering ethanol removes an important microbial hurdle, and NoLo products can retain more fermentable sugars and different pH/hopping profiles, making them more susceptible to microbial contamination if hygiene and stabilization are not tightly controlled.