A TV station in central China has released a video showing a group of workers in a warehouse putting beer into used and recycled Budweiser cans.

Photo: Ng Yi Shu / Mashable

A TV station in central China has released a video showing a group of workers in a warehouse putting beer into used and recycled Budweiser cans.

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Workers shown in the video putting beer into used cans. Photo: Handout

The report shown on Hunan Economic Television shows women clearing old Budweiser cans from a cardboard box and then dumping them into a plastic container to refill them with beer. The cans are then shown being resealed with a canning machine.

It was raided by authorities in Dongguan, a city in Guangdong, south China, early this month.

According to local reports, the factory was churning out 600,000 cartons of fake beer a month, although it hasn’t been specified how long it was operating.

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Police are later shown inside the warehouse, with crates of beer stacked in the background. Photo: Mashable

A Budweiser representative told us that they had reported the matter to the police, and is seeking legal action. Anheuser-Busch InBev, which owns Budweiser, has 14 breweries in China, and is the third-largest beer brand in the country.

Weibo users cracked jokes about the video, in response:

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Photo: Ng Yi Shu / Mashable

“Some ice-cold Budweiser should help you stop worrying [about counterfeits].”

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“No wonder when I drank beer for the first time at a karaoke lounge,

I didn’t feel a thing.”

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Photo: Ng Yi Shu / Mashable

“I definitely can’t get drunk on this beer!”

This isn’t the first time a fake Budweiser production center has been raided in China — in September last year, police seized nearly 26,000 cans of fake Budweiser in Guangzhou, south China, as well as 36,000 aluminum cans, 20,000 lids and 12,000 pieces of ready-to-use packaging material.


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