Tasmania Boag's
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Breaking: Boag's to cease beer production in Tasmania
Boag's to cease beer production in Tasmania as it completes move to mainland Tue 2 Jun 2026 at 10:39am Iconic northern Tasmanian brewer James Boag's has announced it will cease production in the state by November. Parent company Lion Australia had previously shifted production to the mainland for Boag's products sold in those states, but kept brewing in Tasmania for local supply.
Workers ruminate on the 'Boag's ghost' as brewery reaches end of life
Boag's brewery workers call last drinks on long history in Tasmania's north Sat 6 Jun 2026 at 8:26am Beer is not a spirit, but it can become a ghost. Just ask the workers at Boag's renowned Tasmanian brewery, which is now nearing the end of its own life, and was once allegedly haunted by a spectre that some say could be occasionally glimpsed throughout its halls. Beer is always good for loosening the tongue, and the story of the Boag's ghost is one of many tales upon which the brewers have...
'Terribly sad day': Beer experts say Boag's closure points to growing cost of brewing
Beer industry shocked by closure of Tasmanian James Boag's brewery Tue 2 Jun 2026 at 5:46pm In short: Beer industry stakeholders have been shocked by the announcement that James Boag beer will no longer be produced in Launceston. Some say the closure points to significant issues in the industry, which are particularly hard on independent breweries. The 145-year-old brewery in Launceston is due to cease production in November this year.
First footy, now beer: Region braces for $50m hit to local economy
Boag's brewery worker 'angry' and 'frustrated' as Launceston braces for $50 million economic blow Wed 3 Jun 2026 at 3:58pm In short: Launceston leaders say the loss of the Boag's brewery will be felt across the tourism sector. It follows the announcement last month that Hawthorn Football Club would no longer play "home" games in Launceston after the 2027 season.
Melbourne Storm boss hails 'positive' talks with Tasmania to bring games south
The Melbourne Storm CEO has met with Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff about potentially bringing games to the state. Tasmania remains the only state or territory never to have hosted a regular season NRL game. Storm CEO Justin Rodski says he's "got no doubt that we'll end up doing a deal together" if the commercial aspects line up.