BeerTender

BeerTender is a beer tapping system for use at home, developed by Heineken and electronics company Krups combining a very small home tapping installation with readily bought small beer kegs.

BeerTender technology

The BeerTender uses small lightweight 4 liter kegs. These kegs are bought at stores or supermarkets. The kegs are made of plastic and contain a sort of aluminium bag containing the beer. The BeerTender cools the beer inside the kegs from outside the metallic bag. Kegs are preferably cooled before use but can be used uncooled, although the kegs will take quite a bit of time to cool down and be ready for use. The BeerTender pumps air from outside into the keg and puts external pressure on the bag of beer, effectively pushing the beer out of the bag when the tap is opened. Kegs are returned to the shops and collected by the breweries and refitted with new bags of beer. Because of the system without using pressurized capsules, Heineken claims the unit is safe and easy to use in a home environment. The kegs last up to 4 weeks in the BeerTender.

Where and what

The beers which are found in beertender kegs are from the Heineken Group and are currently found in seven countries namely The Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, France, Hungary, Bulgaria and Greece. Brands:

In the Netherlands:

In Austria

In Switzerland

In France

In Hungary

In Bulgaria

In Greece

Rivalry with InBev and Philips

Heineken started out working with Philips on developing the device, but this company pulled out of the project even before its introduction. Heineken subsequently joined up with Krups. After the success of the BeerTender, Philips reentered the market, with a similar product called PerfectDraft, which was done in cooperation with Interbrew. Heineken accused Philips of copying the BeerTender and sued Philips, but Heineken lost the case in December 2005.

nl:BeerTender