Our ambition is to make the Malteurop Group the unchallenged leader in the malt industry. We want to be the best and generate value in all our modes of collaboration with our brewer customers.
To fulfill this ambition, Malteurop has developed an original concept – occupying the position of market integrator of the barley-malt-beer value chain.
The environment is more than a priority for Malteurop. Our success depends on preserving the natural resources necessary for the production of malt. Thus we work to make sure that all our agricultural, industrial, and economic activities are respectful of the environment.
Finally, Malteurop’s ambition is supported and shared by the long-term commitments of its shareholders, who are themselves involved in and contribute to the barley-malt-beer value chain.
The Malteurop Group is the world’s leading malt producer, with a current annual production capacity of more than 2,200,000 tons. The Group is present in 14 countries in Europe, North America, Oceania and Asia, with 27 industrial sites and 1,183 employees.
The story begins in the 1960s in France with the first malting plant, opened in Reims by an agricultural cooperative. It continues with the acquisition and creation of several malting plants, then the birth of Malteurop as a company in 1984…
The Group Leadership Team brings together the members of the Executive Committee and the directors of the local units.
The Malteurop Group operates 27 industrial sites in 13 countries.
Working together: Malteurop also puts that philosophy into practice with its own suppliers, seed producers-breeders, storage operators, and carriers. For in fact all of them make important contributions to the proper operation of the barley value chain, in particular as regards traceability and food safety.
In order to offer its customers new gains in added value, Malteurop now integrates intangible competencies such as risk management. Malteurop handles management of industrial risks, risks of interruption of supplies of raw materials, and financial risks related to the volatility of malting barley prices.