‘Green’ wines less popular with consumers, says Berry Bros (UK)

‘Green’ wines less popular with consumers, says Berry Bros (UK)

Top merchant Berry Bros & Rudd says environmentally-friendly wines are proving less popular with consumers – biodynamic wine sales fell 54% in 2011 and organic wine sales dropped 63% on 2010. But Berry’s saw strong sales from Champagne – up 17% by volume and 41% by value on 2010; while Prosecco sales soared by 28% in terms of volume and by 37% in value on 2010, reports Harpers Wine & Spirit.

Five star Te Pa (NZ)

Te Pa means home for the MacDonald family of Marlborough and the new wine label’s first release has been given a bit of a homecoming by wine critics. Te Pa is the brainchild of proprietor Haysley MacDonald, whose family’s Wairau Bar vineyard was created to supply grapes to several larger wine companies. The wine label was named Te Pa because that was the name the family gave to their 250 hectare home, reports The Marlborough Express.

A legend who lives by the law of common sense (NZ)

Sir George Fistonich, owner and managing director of Villa Maria Estate, one of New Zealand’s top wineries, is a winemaker known throughout the world. From California to Chile, from the supermarkets of London to Dublin and beyond, Villa Maria wines are renowned for their quality. It is exactly 50 years since George Fistonich founded the Villa Maria winery in Auckland. It has been 50 years of growing success, of enormous commercial success and a business that is one of the best anywhere in New Zealand, reports The New Zealand Herald.

Soil biology and Botrytis forum

Regarded plant physiologist Mary Cole will deliver a two-day workshop this month on the current thinking around Botrytis control and vineyard soil health, in north east Victoria. The workshop will take place on 17 and 18 January, and will look at using soil biology and management options to improve vine health and reduce disease incidence.

Taste chairman rules out entry fee

Patrons of the Taste of Tasmania food and wine festival have been assured there will be no entry fee next year. Lord Mayor Damon Thomas flagged the possibility of an entry fee if the State Government does not provide about $300,000 a year in funding for the event. But the council’s Taste Committee chairman, Ron Christie, is adamant that will not happen, reports ABC News.

Visitors flock to Margaret River and wineries

Tourism operators in Margaret River say they have had record crowds during Christmas and New Year, despite devastating bushfires in the area. The fires destroyed 41 properties and tore through 3,400 hectares of bush when a Department of Environment and Conservation prescribed burn got out of control in late November, reports ABC News.

2012 could bring more grape contracts, vineyard sales (US)

Unless the global and U.S. economies weaken, wine industry experts predict 2012 could be the year of the vineyard, considering a number of fine wine producers have worked through ample inventories, wine sales continue to grow and few new vines are going into the ground, reports North Bay Business Journal.

Reality check for Bordeaux prices (France)

Bordeaux prices could be approaching a reality check in 2012, according to experts. A Reuters report predicts that prices will stabilise or even fall in the coming year, partly because Asian buyers will moderate their spending, reports Harpers Wine & Spirit. James Ritchie of Sotheby’s said: “I think generally speaking demand in Asia has changed from ‘buy at any price’ to ‘buy at what I consider a reasonable price’.”

UK drinkers favour English sparkling over Champagne, says report (UK)

Regular consumers of sparkling wine in the UK would rather drink English sparkling wine than Champagne, says a new report. The nation’s domestic bubbly is enjoying ‘phenomenal’ growth and rapidly entering the mainstream, according to the new figures, which suggest that most sparkling wine consumers in the UK have tried it at least once. Meanwhile, the total market for sparkling wine in the UK has grown by two-thirds in only four years, bucking the trend of economic gloom and slowing growth in the still wine category, reports Decanter.

Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc yields may fall (NZ)

A poor flowering could lower the yield of the region’s flagship Sauvignon Blanc vines. New Zealand Winegrowers chairman Stuart Smith said flowering was very slow this season due to cooler weather. That would reduce this season’s yield and also hurt the following year’s productivity, as it sets up the fertility of the vines a year in advance, he said. Smaller yields would be a bad thing for individual growers, but could be positive for people who did not have a contract for their grapes, reports The Marlborough Express.

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