Nitrogen Generation for Craft Breweries & Beverage
Better beer quality, lower costs, complete control over your nitrogen supply
Why Sacramento Breweries Choose On-Site Nitrogen
Sacramento’s thriving craft beer scene - 50+ operating breweries including Track 7 Brewing, Device Brewing, Fieldwork Brewing, Alaro Craft Brewery, and dozens more - represents a significant and growing nitrogen market.
With explosive growth (Palm Tree Brewing, Humle Beer House, High-Hand Brewing all opened in 2024), more breweries are discovering that on-site nitrogen generation is essential for:
- Product quality - Consistent purity, no contamination
- Cost control - 50-70% savings vs. delivered nitrogen
- Production flexibility - Package when you want, not when nitrogen arrives
- Growth capacity - Scale nitrogen with production increases
Brewery nitrogen applications:
- Nitro beer production (stouts, porters, widget beers)
- Can and keg purging (oxygen elimination before filling)
- Packaging line pressurization
- Tank transfers and blanketing
- Draft system pressurization (nitro taps)
- Cleaning and purging lines
The Brewery Nitrogen Challenge
Seasonal Demand Variations
Craft breweries have uniquely challenging consumption patterns:
Peak Season (Summer/Fall):
- 2-3x production volume
- Daily canning/packaging runs
- High nitrogen consumption: 60-100+ SCFM during packaging
- 8-16 hours/day nitrogen usage
Off-Season (Winter/Spring):
- Reduced production volume
- Less frequent packaging (weekly vs. daily)
- Lower consumption: 25-40 SCFM typical
- 4-8 hours/day nitrogen usage
Special Releases:
- Sudden demand spikes for limited releases
- Need extra capacity without warning
- Can’t afford to run out mid-packaging run
The sizing dilemma:
- Size for peak = massive waste during off-season (energy and capital)
- Size for average = can’t handle peak production (runs out, production delays)
- Solution: Right-sized system with efficient turn-down capability
The Delivered Nitrogen Problem
What Sacramento brewers tell us:
❌ Unpredictable supply - Run out mid-canning run, oxidized beer ❌ High costs - $30,000-80,000/year for medium breweries ❌ Seasonal price spikes - Paying 2-3x more during peak season ❌ Quality risks - Cylinder aging, contamination, oxygen exposure ❌ Storage space - 6-15 cylinders taking up valuable brewery space ❌ Scheduling constraints - Can’t package when you want, only when nitrogen available
“We were going through 8-12 cylinders a week during peak season and maybe 3-4 in winter. The cost was killing us, but worse was worrying about running out during a canning run and ending up with oxidized beer.”
— Head Brewer, Sacramento Craft Brewery
On-site generation solves all of these problems while improving beer quality.
Nitrogen’s Critical Role in Beer Quality
Oxygen is the Enemy
Why oxygen ruins beer:
- Oxidation destroys hop flavors (cardboard, papery taste)
- Reduces shelf life dramatically
- Dulls malt character
- Creates off-flavors
- Results in poor customer reviews and returns
Nitrogen prevents oxidation:
- Purging cans/kegs before filling (displace oxygen)
- Blanketing fermentation tanks (prevent oxygen ingress)
- Transferring beer without oxygen pickup
- Result: Longer shelf life, better flavor stability, happier customers
Nitro Beer Production
The nitro beer trend:
- Creamy, smooth texture
- Cascading effect and dense head
- Stouts, porters, IPAs, even lagers
- Premium pricing ($2-4 more per pint)
- Differentiation in crowded market
Nitrogen requirements:
- High purity (99.5%+ for quality results)
- Consistent pressure for draft systems
- Sufficient volume for widget beer packaging
- Reliable supply (can’t run out mid-service)
ROI on nitro beer:
- Higher margins offset nitrogen costs
- Attracts customers seeking unique experiences
- Menu differentiation
- On-site generation enables nitro programs
Case Study: Sacramento Craft Brewery
See full case study: Craft Brewery Improves Product Quality, Cuts Costs 58%
Challenge: 15,000 BBL/year brewery spending $32,400/year on delivered nitrogen with quality inconsistencies and supply concerns.
Our Approach: 90-day data logging across full seasonal cycle revealed:
- Peak demand: 95 SCFM (summer canning runs)
- Off-season: 28 SCFM average
- Vendors recommended 150 SCFM (massive overkill)
Results:
- System cost: $32,400 installed (80 SCFM membrane system)
- Annual savings: $18,800/year
- Payback: 21 months
- Zero oxidation issues in 12+ months (previously 2-3 batches/year)
- Improved shelf life and customer reviews
Quality impact was even bigger than cost savings.
Right-Sizing for Breweries
Understanding Your Actual Needs
Key measurement factors:
Packaging day peak demand
- How many cans/kegs per hour?
- Purge volume and duration
- Simultaneous operations (canning + blanketing + nitro draft)
- Typical: 40-120 SCFM during packaging
Non-packaging baseline
- Tank blanketing and transfers
- Draft system pressurization
- Cleaning and purging
- Typical: 10-30 SCFM continuous
Seasonal variations
- Summer vs. winter production
- Special release volumes
- Growth trajectory
- Typical: 2-3x variation peak to off-season
Purity requirements
- Can/keg purging: 99.5%+ recommended
- Nitro beer: 99.5%+ for quality
- Tank blanketing: 99%+ acceptable
- Draft systems: 99%+ typical
The Measurement Advantage
Without measurement (standard vendor approach):
- Estimate peak packaging at 120 SCFM
- Add 30% safety margin
- Recommend 150-180 SCFM system
- Quote: $65,000-85,000
- Off-season: System runs at 15-25% capacity (very inefficient)
With 60-90 day measurement:
- Actual peak during canning: 95 SCFM (not estimated 120)
- Actual off-season average: 28 SCFM
- Right-size: 100 SCFM system with excellent turn-down
- Quote: $38,000-45,000
- Savings: $20,000-40,000 capital + $3,000-5,000/year energy
- Perfect capacity for actual needs, efficient year-round
Technology Selection for Breweries
Membrane Systems (Most Common for Craft Breweries)
Advantages for brewing applications:
- ✅ Lower capital cost - $30,000-50,000 for typical craft brewery
- ✅ Excellent turn-down - Operates efficiently at 30-100% capacity (perfect for seasonal variations)
- ✅ Simple maintenance - Minimal service requirements
- ✅ Compact footprint - Fits in small spaces
- ✅ Sufficient purity - 99.5% typical (perfect for most brewing applications)
- ✅ Quick installation - Typically 1-2 days
Ideal for:
- Small to medium craft breweries (<100 SCFM peak)
- Seasonal production variations
- Budget-conscious operations
- Space-constrained facilities
Typical specifications:
- Purity: 95-99.5% (adjustable)
- Pressure: 90-120 PSI (perfect for brewing equipment)
- Turn-down: Can operate at 30% capacity efficiently
- Lifespan: 10-15 years with proper maintenance
PSA Systems (For Larger Breweries)
Consider PSA for:
- Production >20,000 BBL/year
- Very high purity requirements (99.9%+)
- Consistent high-volume demand
- Multiple locations or packaging lines
Advantages:
- Higher purity available (up to 99.999%)
- Lower operating cost at scale
- Proven reliability for 24/7 operation
- Long equipment life (15-20 years)
Trade-offs:
- Higher capital cost ($60,000-120,000 typical)
- Less efficient at part-load (seasonal variations)
- Larger footprint
- More complex maintenance
Recommendation: Most craft breweries choose membrane systems for cost and flexibility. Larger production breweries may benefit from PSA.
ROI Analysis for Craft Breweries
Small Brewery (5,000 BBL/year, 40 SCFM peak)
| Cost Category | Delivered Nitrogen | On-Site Membrane |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Cost | $0 (cylinder rental) | $28,000 installed |
| Annual Operating | $18,500 (cylinders) | $7,200 (electric, maint.) |
| Annual Savings | — | $11,300 |
| Payback Period | — | 30 months |
| 5-Year Cost | $92,500 | $64,000 |
| 5-Year Savings | — | $28,500 |
Medium Brewery (15,000 BBL/year, 80 SCFM peak)
| Cost Category | Delivered Nitrogen | On-Site Membrane |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Cost | $0 (cylinder rental) | $42,000 installed |
| Annual Operating | $38,000 (cylinders) | $14,500 (electric, maint.) |
| Annual Savings | — | $23,500 |
| Payback Period | — | 21 months |
| 5-Year Cost | $190,000 | $114,500 |
| 5-Year Savings | — | $75,500 |
Large Brewery (40,000 BBL/year, 150 SCFM peak)
| Cost Category | Delivered Nitrogen | On-Site PSA |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Cost | $0 (cylinder rental) | $85,000 installed |
| Annual Operating | $92,000 (cylinders) | $24,000 (electric, maint.) |
| Annual Savings | — | $68,000 |
| Payback Period | — | 15 months |
| 5-Year Cost | $460,000 | $205,000 |
| 5-Year Savings | — | $255,000 |
Additional benefits beyond direct savings:
- Quality improvements (fewer oxidized batches)
- Production flexibility (package when optimal, not when nitrogen arrives)
- Growth capacity (scale production without nitrogen constraints)
- Floor space reclaimed (6-15 cylinders removed)
Quality Improvements Beyond Cost
Oxidation Prevention
Before on-site nitrogen:
- 2-4 batches/year with oxidation issues (typical industry rate)
- At $3,000-8,000 per affected batch (dumped or discounted)
- Annual quality cost: $6,000-32,000
After on-site nitrogen:
- Consistent purity every packaging run
- Zero contamination from aging cylinders
- Oxidation issues: Nearly eliminated
- Better shelf life and customer reviews
Production Flexibility
The “nitrogen anxiety” problem:
- Can we package tomorrow or do we need to wait for delivery?
- Do we have enough for the weekend canning run?
- Should we do two shifts or play it safe with one?
- Can we take on that contract canning job?
With on-site generation:
- Package whenever optimal for quality and schedule
- Never rush packaging due to nitrogen concerns
- Accept contract canning work confidently
- Scale production without nitrogen constraints
Result: Better beer quality from less rushed, more controlled packaging.
Sacramento Brewery Market
Local Craft Beer Scene
50+ operating breweries including:
- Track 7 Brewing (Natomas) - High-volume production
- Device Brewing - Award-winning beers
- Fieldwork Brewing - Quality-focused
- Alaro Craft Brewery - Growing operation
- New Helvetia Brewing - Established local favorite
- Many more across Sacramento, Elk Grove, Roseville, Davis
Recent growth:
- Palm Tree Brewing (2024)
- Humle Beer House (2024)
- High-Hand Brewing (2024)
- Market is expanding, nitrogen needs growing
Typical profiles:
- 3,000-25,000 BBL/year production
- Seasonal demand variations (2-3x summer vs. winter)
- Quality-focused (oxidation cannot be tolerated)
- Space-constrained (cylinder storage problematic)
- Cost-conscious (margins tight in competitive market)
Regional Advantages
Sacramento as a brewing hub:
- Strong local beer culture and support
- Tourism and taproom traffic
- Distribution to Bay Area and beyond
- Collaborative brewery community
Service benefits:
- Local support and service
- Same-day response for issues
- Understanding of seasonal patterns
- Shared knowledge across brewery customers
Installation & Maintenance
What to Expect
Installation process:
- System arrives pre-assembled and tested
- Electrical connection (208V-480V typical)
- Compressed air supply connection (brewery air compressor or dedicated)
- Nitrogen piping to distribution points
- Testing and commissioning
- Total time: 1-3 days typical
Space requirements:
- Small system (40 SCFM): 4’ x 6’ footprint
- Medium system (80 SCFM): 5’ x 8’ footprint
- Can often install outside (weather-protected enclosure)
- Minimal clearance needed
Maintenance schedule:
- Daily: Visual inspection (5 minutes)
- Weekly: Check monitoring data
- Quarterly: Filter changes (1 hour)
- Annual: Comprehensive service (4 hours, $800-1,200)
- Total annual cost: $2,000-4,000 depending on system size
Reliability:
- 99%+ uptime typical
- Preventive maintenance prevents failures
- Remote monitoring catches issues early
- Backup cylinder connection for insurance
Ready to Brew Better Beer for Less?
Free Assessment for Sacramento Breweries:
✅ 60-90 day data logging - Capture full seasonal variation ✅ Packaging day analysis - Measure peak demand during actual canning/kegging ✅ Off-season measurement - Ensure efficient operation year-round ✅ Purity verification - Match system to your quality requirements ✅ Growth planning - Account for production increases ✅ ROI calculator - Custom analysis with your actual usage ✅ Quality analysis - Estimate oxidation prevention value
Most breweries discover:
- Delivered nitrogen costs 50-70% more than on-site generation
- Quality improvements offset costs even before direct savings
- Production flexibility enables growth
- Payback periods of 18-30 months typical
- System pays for itself in saved batches alone
Contact Us
Phone: (916) XXX-XXXX Email: Assessment Request Form
Serving Sacramento breweries: Sacramento, Elk Grove, Roseville, Davis, Folsom, and throughout the greater Sacramento region.
Brewery references available - Talk to local brewers using on-site nitrogen.
Related Resources:
- Craft Brewery Case Study - 58% Cost Reduction, Quality Improvements
- Nitro Beer Production Guide (coming soon)
- Can Purging Best Practices (coming soon)
- ROI Calculator
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Will my beer taste different with on-site nitrogen vs. delivered?
A: On-site nitrogen typically improves taste by providing more consistent purity (no aging cylinders) and eliminating contamination risks. Many breweries report better shelf life and fewer oxidation issues.
Q: What if I run out of nitrogen during a canning run?
A: Systems are sized with buffer capacity, and most include backup cylinder connections for absolute redundancy. In 100+ brewery installations, we’ve never had a customer run out during packaging.
Q: How much space does it take?
A: Typical craft brewery systems are 4-8 feet long and 2-4 feet wide. Many install outside in weather-protected enclosures. Much smaller than storing 10-15 cylinders.
Q: What about maintenance?
A: Very minimal - quarterly filter changes (you can do yourself) and annual professional service ($800-1,200). Total annual maintenance cost is $2,000-4,000 depending on system size.
Q: Can I expand capacity as I grow?
A: Yes! We can add modules or upgrade systems as production increases. Also, systems are typically sized with 20-30% growth buffer built in.
Ready to Learn More?
Schedule a free assessment to see how much you could save with right-sized nitrogen generation.