This blog post was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

Robin Twyman

Robin Twyman

Consul for Business and Government Affairs

Part of Partners in Prosperity

23rd January 2012

Enjoy beer (responsibly)

I love a good beer.  Preferably a real ale (consumed responsibly, naturally).

If I was back home in the UK, I’d order a pint of Spitfire, brewed by England’s oldest brewery, Faversham-based Shepherd Neame.  So I thought I was going to be disappointed with the lighter offerings in the US, and have to resign myself to imported beer.  But I’ve been delighted with the offerings from an increasing number of very fine American microbreweries here.

Take Dogfish Head (from Delaware) for example.  Or New Belgium (from Colorado) who make Fat Tire, Magic Hat (in Vermont), Saranac (in NY’s Adirondacks) or the Great Lakes Brewing Company (from Cleveland, Ohio).  All of them are very fine ales, and compare pretty well to what I’d expect in the UK.  Even some larger craft breweries, like Boston’s Samuel Adams, match up well to my taste, too.

Not surprisingly, “lite” beers aren’t normally my thing though, and I usually don’t pay them much attention.  But they caught my eye last week when I saw this article in the Wall Street Journal, “Coors Light Tops Bud as No.2 Beer”.   What particularly interested me wasn’t just that Bud no longer occupies the top two places, but that Coors Light is owned by MillerCoors, a joint venture between Molson Coors Brewing Company and UK-headquartered SABMiller.  And SABMiller alone has 8 breweries in the US, employing 8,800 people.  I think that’s a good example of UK investments supporting US jobs.  And helping Americans, and Brits abroad, enjoy a “cold one” (or as we prefer in the UK, slightly closer to room temperature).

About Robin Twyman

Robin Twyman took up his posting as Consul for Business and Government Affairs at the UK Government Office in Seattle in January 2013. He was previously First Secretary (Trade Policy,…

Robin Twyman took up his posting as Consul for Business and Government Affairs at the UK Government Office in Seattle in January 2013. He was previously First Secretary (Trade Policy, Business Affairs and Agriculture) at the British Embassy in Washington.

Born in Canterbury, Kent, in 1968, Robin joined the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in 1987. His diplomatic career has seen him serve overseas tours in Harare, Zimbabwe (1989-1992), and Geneva, Switzerland (2001-2006), plus short overseas tours in Mozambique, Mauritius, Russia, Abu Dhabi, Israel, Jordan, DR Congo, Albania, Zambia, Qatar, Nigeria, Syria, and Yemen.

Robin’s assignments have covered a wide range of duties. In Geneva, Robin was a UK delegate to the World Trade Organisation, where his portfolio included the Doha Trade Round’s agriculture negotiations, and trade disputes. Whilst there, he was elected to serve as a chair on one of the WTO’s sub-committees. In the FCO in London, Robin has been a Foreign Office Press Officer (1999-2001), Horn of Africa desk officer, a manager for the UK’s Afghanistan Counter Narcotics programme, and headed up the UK’s South Atlantic Overseas Territories team.