The Call Time on Duty campaign ramped up its activity against the duty escalator a notch on Wednesday night with the launch of a new ‘coaster campaign’ to raise public awareness. Before the Budget on 19 March, it plans to release over 300,000 ‘drinks coasters’ into the on-trade to raise public awareness of how much UK consumers pay in duty on wine and spirits – and put pressure on George Osbourne to abolish the “punitive” above inflation hikes.

(And make no mistake, though they may look the same, drinks coasters are definitely NOT the same as beer mats, I was firmly told.)

The event – at a hotel bar in Westminster – brought together the brains behind the campaign: the Wine & Spirits Trade Association, the Scotch Whisky Association, and the Tax Payers’ Alliance; with members of the drinks industry and some notable faces from Westminster. Among them, former Defra minister Caroline Spelman and the SNP member for Moray, Angus Robertson. Whether they were there to lend their support or maybe just for a quick drink and a catch up, remains to be seen; the mood in the room was certainly upbeat. But will the Call Time on Duty Campaign gets what it wants?

The industry seems hopeful. Speaking to The Grocer, Tesco BWS boss Dan Jago called it an “impressive” campaign, and with the three organisations pooling their experience, it was likely to bring some clout. “Tackling it with one voice is very powerful,” he said.

This is certainly what the SWA is hoping for. With the association itself booming and an explosion of distilleries being set up, it says it’s vital to keep the momentum going. Although export may be the Holy Grail, new, smaller malt whisky brands are reliant on the domestic market to establish themselves and bring in income during the early years when stock is laid down to mature. Suppressing the domestic market is likely to have repercussions – and a government’s attitude towards its own produce can be instrumental in attracting lucrative export markets.

The TPA, meanwhile, is confident its experience in helping to get the escalator scrapped on beer last year will stand it in good stead. It also cannily recognises the importance of this Budget being both an election budget – in which voter-pleasing initiatives never go amiss – and coming six months before the Scottish vote on independence. Showing support for Scotland’s national drink – which accounts for 25% of the UK’s food and drink exports and is worth £20bn to the UK economy – may be an added incentive.

“We’re confident of a win - but when it might come into effect and how much it will be, is another matter,” one of its representatives told me.

According to the WSTA, meetings with the economic secretary to the Treasury Nicky Morgan had given it cause to be hopeful – she was “receptive”, if giving little away.

But whether George O is willing to give anything away will be evident in just under three weeks’ time. Until then, there’s time to pour yourself a stiff drink – just don’t put it on a beer mat.