Yuengling Lager is on tap at the Cinema Drafthouse in West Hazelton, Pa.
Carolyn Kaster / AP Photo
Yuengling Lager is on tap at the Cinema Drafthouse in West Hazelton, Pa.
Carolyn Kaster / AP Photo
(Pittsburgh) — Pennsylvania’s wine, beer and cider industries are getting a boost from the Wolf administration to increase marketing and production. The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board approved grants totaling $1,925,319 for 13 different projects.
Some $600,000 of that total was awarded to Penn State University for eight different wine and malt and brewed beverage projects.
“Pennsylvania industries have to adopt new ways of doing business in the COVID-19 world,” Gov. Tom Wolf said this week. “These grants will provide substantial funding to help two vital parts of our agricultural community not only explore ways of improving production methods, but also boost marketing efforts that reach beyond our borders.”
The Pennsylvania Malt and Brewed Beverages Industry Promotion Board and the Wine Marketing and Research Board helped select the projects which range from improving hops production to the color of certain red wines.
Both boards recommended launching a joint advertising campaign for the state’s growing cider industry. The Pennsylvania Cider Guild will use the money to develop a website with a “PA Cider Trail guide,” as well as other educational materials. The goal is to increase membership in the statewide cider guild and promote the state’s cider industry.
Among the seven wine projects launched by the grants is research by Penn State that will study how the invasive spotted lanternfly affects cabernet franc, a grape variety often blended with Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon wines.
Penn State Extension has been studying the numerous negative impacts of the spotted lanternfly since it first arrived in Pennsylvania in 2014. Researchers have recorded the pest feeding on economically important crops like grapevines, cucumber, hardwoods, and ornamentals.
Damage has been reported at Pennsylvania vineyards including reduced starch concentration in vine roots, lower crop yield, increased susceptibility to frost damage and death of vines. Penn State will receive $108,161 to further study how to manage and suppress spotted lanternfly populations near vineyards.
The other five wine projects are:
The six beer projects funded by the grants are:
In the years since the first beer grants were approved in 2017, the PLCB has awarded more than $5.8 million in grants to support the Pennsylvania beer industry.
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