Since the 1950s, the Israeli beer industry has been dominated by no more than two companies at a time. Beginning in the 1990s with the establishment of Israel Beer Breweries, it and Tempo Beer Industries control 70% of Israel's beer market. Tempo produces the Goldstar and Maccabee labels, while Israel Beer produces Carlsberg and Tuborg. In addition, around two dozen licensed commercial microbreweries operate in the country. Netanya-based Tempo is the largest brewery in Israel. In 1999 Tempo's Goldstar and Maccabee beers accounted for 60% of all beer sales in the country. Tempo also imports
Heineken and
Amstel. Israel Beer Breweries entered the market in as a partnership between
Carlsberg Group and the local
Coca-Cola company. In 1996 it began distributing
Guinness. Israel Beer Breweries operates a beer-themed visitor center in
Ashkelon.
Craft and boutique beer Craft brewing began to develop midway through the first decade of the 2000s. Journalist Shai Cooper, along with brewer Gadi Deviri, founded the '
Israeli Beer Club' in 2002, unofficially uniting most of the homebrewers in Israel at the time. The two also organized several homebrewing competitions, initially attended by a few brewers, but already in the third edition, dozens of contestants participated. Many of them, such as Uri Shagai from Alexander Brewery, David Cohen from Dancing Camel Brewery, the Shapira brothers from Shapira Brewery, Asaf Levi who founded
Malka Brewery, and brewers who later founded additional boutique breweries, all took part and later became owners of their own boutique breweries. At one point, Tempo Beer Industries sponsored Cooper and Deviri's homebrewing competition and the Israeli Beer Club, under the name 'Samuel Adams Long Shot', similarly to the competition in the
United States. Later on, Shai Cooper himself founded a homebrewing competition called the 'Stout Challenge', along with the
Carlsberg Brewery in
Ashkelon. The
Dancing Camel Brewery, which opened in
Tel Aviv in 2006, was the first microbrewery to open in Israel. Later that year the
Golan Brewery opened up in the
Golan Heights region of Israel. Jem's Beer Factory, Israel's first kosher microbrewery, opened in
Petah Tikva in 2009. By the end of 2009 there were microbreweries operating from
Dekel and
Qiryat Gat in Israel's south; through
Sal'it, Petah Tikva and Tel Aviv; up to
Haifa, the
Jezreel Valley,
Ramot Naftali, and
Yehi'am; and as far as
Qatzrin in the Golan Heights. 2010 was an especially active year for new microbreweries. ==Beers==