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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

North East pubs closing at rate of one every two weeks, latest figures show

A separate report from SIBA shows how the North has seen a higher percentage of brewery closures than other º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regions

New figures have been published revealing the rate of pub closures(Image: PA)

One pub closed every two weeks last year in the North East, new figures have shown, amid concerns the trend could continue for some time.

The British Beer and Pub Association has published the statistics showing how 54 pubs closed their doors for good across the region in 2022 and 2023, triggering around 650 job losses. The organisation said the numbers follow a continuing trend which will have a major impact on the pubs’ communities, especially in rural areas affected by closures, where job opportunities are lacking.

Across the wider º£½ÇÊÓÆµ there were 500 pub closures in 2023, at a time when the hospitality industry, which operates on narrow margins, is battling to navigate a number of challenges including rocketing energy costs, higher labour costs, rising prices of raw materials, and a heavy tax burden.

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  • Chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, Emma McClarkin outlined the sector’s huge contribution to the economy, pouring £26.2bn in to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy while generating £15.1bn in tax revenue. She called upon the Government to make changes to the business tax system to aid the industry, which supports 936,000 jobs from farmers growing barley and hops, to the brewers, pub landlords and their staff.

    She said: “The closure of 54 pubs over the past two years is a huge blow for the sector, the North East and for the many local communities where a pub is one of the few remaining public spaces and an important cultural and community asset. The rate of decline is significant with the loss of a quarter of pubs across the country since 2003.

    “There is still time for the local councils and Government to reconsider the level of business rate relief they provide that will best support local businesses. We need to set a path for the long-term sustainability for the beer and pub sector otherwise it will be too late for many of our much-loved pubs and the central role they provide supporting local High Streets and the broader local economy.”

    The closure figures have emerged as the owner of The Punchbowl Hotel in Jesmond, Newcastle, has become the latest on Tyneside to announce he is calling time at the venue. Dave Carr’s firm Frank & Bird was behind a grand restoration of the empty pub before re-opening it five years ago, as a sister venue to Gosforth pub The Brandling Villa.

    He announced on social media how he had decided not to extend the tenancy, saying: “As much as we love it here, £10,000 a month utility bills, Covid repayments and rampant inflation has left us a little bruised and a little lacking in energy that another five years asks for.”