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Alcohol group backs pub call 10.01.11

A CHARITY that aims to tackle harmful drinking has welcomed a call by Irish vintners for minimum alcohol prices.
The North West Alcohol Forum (NWAF) said there was "clear international evidence" that a minimum price for alcohol would dramatically assist a reduction in alcohol consumption.
NWAF director Eamon O'Kane said: "In Ireland the pattern of alcohol purchasing has shifted from the pub to the off-licence and supermarkets in particular. A way to reduce binge drinking and teenage drinking would be to support this call by the Vintners’ Federation of Ireland."
Mr O'Kane added: "A well run pub can offer regulated and appropriately priced alcohol vending that removes the need for expensive legislative minimum pricing processes.”
According to the local forum, recent research at the University of Sheffield found that introducing a minimum price per unit of alcohol reduced levels of alcohol consumption by 10.3 per cent among harmful drinkers and 3.8 per cent among moderate drinkers.
Research in Ireland shows that there has been a 305% increase in the number of off-licences between 1998 and 2009 and over the same time period pub licences have decreased by 32%.
Meanwhile, in 2009, the average cost of a 500ml can of lager from the off-licence was €1.80 while the average price of a pint of lager in the pub was €4.50. The NWAF said the off-licence sector accounted for half of the alcohol market share in 2008 and while the volume of alcohol sold from the off-licence was much greater than that sold over the bar counter.
Meanwhile, Donegal Vintners’ Group chairman and owner of the Glencar Inn, Letterkenny, Martin Gibbons explained: “Commercially, it is clear that we cannot compete with the low prices charged by supermarkets and if the practice continues Ireland will lose the pub as a key venue for the responsible and controlled sale of alcohol. Publicans are under severe pressure with turnover down between 20% and 40%, many pubs will close if something is not done."
Mr O’Kane said: “It may seem ironic to some that we should be advocating for the pub but we have never been an organisation that is anti-alcohol. A concerted effort by whatever means to reduce high volume, low cost sales, coupled with mandatory responsible server of alcohol training will undoubtedly save lives and reduce the negative experiences of alcohol in Ireland.”
The NWAF covers Donegal, Sligo and Leitrim and is focused on challenging the negative aspects of alcohol culture in these counties.
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