<p>Dutch brewing giant Heineken said on Wednesday it would cut around 8,000 jobs worldwide as the coronavirus pandemic pushed it into the red.</p>.<p>The world's number two brewer after Belgian-Brazilian AB InBev will slash nearly 10 per cent of its workforce as Covid restrictions keep bars and restaurants closed.</p>.<p>Heineken reported a net loss of 204 million euros ($247 million) for 2020, compared with a net profit of 2.1 billion euros a year earlier, while sales fell 17 per cent to 23 billion euros.</p>.<p>Heineken CEO Dolf van den Brink, who took charge last April, said it had been "a year of unprecedented disruption and transition" for the company.</p>.<p>The Dutchman said the layoffs were part of efforts to reshape Heineken, whose brands include Strongbow and Amstel, targeting two billion euros of savings by 2023.</p>.<p>"The Covid-19 pandemic and governments' measures continue to have a material impact on our markets and business," Heineken said in a statement.</p>.<p>The brewer's beer sales fell 8.1 per cent for the year, although its core Heineken brand only dropped 0.4 per cent, "significantly outperforming the total market", it said.</p>.<p>The brand grew double-digits in 25 markets including Brazil, China and Britain, it added.</p>.<p>The zero-alcohol Heineken 0.0 was a rare bright spot, with single-digit growth globally.</p>.<p>But other brands had a "mixed performance" with growth for Desperados tequila-flavoured beer and a slight rise for Birra Moretti, but Amstel and Sol sales were down.</p>.<p>Like the rest of the drinks industry, Heineken has suffered from the widespread closure of drinking holes around the world, its CEO said.</p>.<p>"The impact of the pandemic on our business was amplified by our on-trade (bars, cafes and restaurants) and geographic exposure," said van den Brink.</p>.<p>Less than 30 per cent of outlets were operating in Europe, in particular at the end of January, it said.</p>.<p>The brewer said that as vaccines were slowly rolled out it expected further problems in the first half of this year, then for "conditions to gradually improve" in the second.</p>.<p>Heineken had announced in October that restructuring was needed to reduce personnel costs but gave no figure for layoffs at the time.</p>.<p>The company employs around 85,000 people globally.</p>.<p>"The overall restructuring programme will reduce our employee base by (about) 8,000 people," Wednesday's statement said.</p>.<p>This includes cutting jobs at the head office in Amsterdam while other layoffs would depend on local circumstances, it added.</p>.<p>Heineken's reshaping plan includes a focus on its iconic green-bottled namesake brand, plus "fewer, bigger bets in local premium brands", it said</p>.<p>The brewer, founded in the 19th century in Amsterdam, now sells more than 300 brands worldwide.</p>.<p>The company said it would also focus on no-alcohol options and push into "hard seltzers" -- alcoholic soft drinks.</p>
<p>Dutch brewing giant Heineken said on Wednesday it would cut around 8,000 jobs worldwide as the coronavirus pandemic pushed it into the red.</p>.<p>The world's number two brewer after Belgian-Brazilian AB InBev will slash nearly 10 per cent of its workforce as Covid restrictions keep bars and restaurants closed.</p>.<p>Heineken reported a net loss of 204 million euros ($247 million) for 2020, compared with a net profit of 2.1 billion euros a year earlier, while sales fell 17 per cent to 23 billion euros.</p>.<p>Heineken CEO Dolf van den Brink, who took charge last April, said it had been "a year of unprecedented disruption and transition" for the company.</p>.<p>The Dutchman said the layoffs were part of efforts to reshape Heineken, whose brands include Strongbow and Amstel, targeting two billion euros of savings by 2023.</p>.<p>"The Covid-19 pandemic and governments' measures continue to have a material impact on our markets and business," Heineken said in a statement.</p>.<p>The brewer's beer sales fell 8.1 per cent for the year, although its core Heineken brand only dropped 0.4 per cent, "significantly outperforming the total market", it said.</p>.<p>The brand grew double-digits in 25 markets including Brazil, China and Britain, it added.</p>.<p>The zero-alcohol Heineken 0.0 was a rare bright spot, with single-digit growth globally.</p>.<p>But other brands had a "mixed performance" with growth for Desperados tequila-flavoured beer and a slight rise for Birra Moretti, but Amstel and Sol sales were down.</p>.<p>Like the rest of the drinks industry, Heineken has suffered from the widespread closure of drinking holes around the world, its CEO said.</p>.<p>"The impact of the pandemic on our business was amplified by our on-trade (bars, cafes and restaurants) and geographic exposure," said van den Brink.</p>.<p>Less than 30 per cent of outlets were operating in Europe, in particular at the end of January, it said.</p>.<p>The brewer said that as vaccines were slowly rolled out it expected further problems in the first half of this year, then for "conditions to gradually improve" in the second.</p>.<p>Heineken had announced in October that restructuring was needed to reduce personnel costs but gave no figure for layoffs at the time.</p>.<p>The company employs around 85,000 people globally.</p>.<p>"The overall restructuring programme will reduce our employee base by (about) 8,000 people," Wednesday's statement said.</p>.<p>This includes cutting jobs at the head office in Amsterdam while other layoffs would depend on local circumstances, it added.</p>.<p>Heineken's reshaping plan includes a focus on its iconic green-bottled namesake brand, plus "fewer, bigger bets in local premium brands", it said</p>.<p>The brewer, founded in the 19th century in Amsterdam, now sells more than 300 brands worldwide.</p>.<p>The company said it would also focus on no-alcohol options and push into "hard seltzers" -- alcoholic soft drinks.</p>