The Malteurop Group operates 27 industrial sites in 13 countries. The motivation behind this international outlook is the desire to be:
During its sustained growth, which has been regular and above the market growth rates, Malteurop has continually invested in renewing its production facilities, whose average per-unit production capacity is 90,000 metric tons of malt.
Over 30% of the total industrial base is less than 10 years old. The engineering and construction of more than a third of the Group’s plants were handled internally by Malteurop’s specific teams.
All of our manufacturing facilities meet criteria of flexibility of orientation of the production facility and of the production process. This allows the plants to adapt to suit differences in raw materials, local conditions, and the needs and demands of brewers.
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 Group Leadership Team brings together the members of the Executive Committee and the directors of the local units.
The Group’s rapid and profitable growth and its continuous efforts to improve performance in all areas are our two vectors of value creation.
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…
To adapt as well as possible to the expectations and imperatives of brewers and respond to the varied demands of a diversified international clientele, Malteurop offers several modes of commercial collaboration, as well as consulting, engineering, and training services.
Malteurop has an international Technical Department whose goal is to optimize the industrial process at two levels – that of the malting process itself and that of the design and renovation of malting plants.