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Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 4:26 pm
by Paolo
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-10-3 ... -year.html

Global wine production will slump to the lowest in 37 years after weather damage to grapes from France (http://topics.bloomberg.com/france/) to Argentina (http://topics.bloomberg.com/argentina/), forcing a draw down of stocks, the International Organisation of Vine and Wine said.

Output may fall to about 248.2 million hectoliters (6.56 billion gallons) this year from 264.2 million hectoliters in 2011, according to the group, known as OIV. That would be the lowest since at least 1975, Federico Castellucci, director general, said at a press conference in Paris today.

Drought and hail harmed vines and grapes in France and Italy, the biggest producers, while Argentina also suffered weather damage to its vineyards, according to Castellucci. The production slump will deplete stocks and result in a “tight” market for wine to make spirits and vermouth, the OIV head said.

“We’re dipping into the reserves for supply,” Castellucci said in an interview. “There’s a lack of product in bulk. Merchants worldwide are starting to turn to the small countries for bulk wine, that shows there’s real tension.”

World wine consumption in 2012 is estimated at 235.7 million to 249.4 million hectoliters, with an additional 30 million hectoliters of wine used to make spirits, vermouth and vinegar, according to the OIV.

Castellucci declined to provide an estimate of global wine stocks, citing a lack of data. Market feedback suggests bulk wine availability is falling and prices are climbing, he said.

“If we don’t have availability in the market, there’s a strong chance some products will increase in price,” Victor Magalhaes, an OIV statistician, said in an interview, citing wine vinegar as a product that may become more expensive. “Countries that are large producers of must and juice all face a shortage this year,” he said, referring to young wine.

Biggest Suppliers Bulk-wine prices in France, Italy (http://topics.bloomberg.com/italy/) and Spain (http://topics.bloomberg.com/spain/), the biggest suppliers, are rising due to the harvest slide, broker Ciatti Co. wrote Oct. 8. The cost for a liter (0.26 gallon) of Italian pinot grigio from the 2012 vintage rose to 1.30 to 1.45 euros ($1.69-$1.88) from 1.20 to 1.30 euros last month, Ciatti said.

This year’s smaller harvests may reduce the supply of wines with a protected designation of origin, known as AOC in France, according to Magalhaes. “For some AOC stocks there is already a shortage of exports,” he said. “The shortage of Burgundy wine is a fact.”

Wine production in France may slump 20 percent this year to the lowest in at least four decades after winter drought, cold and wet weather, hailstorms, a heat wave, and summer dryness damaged vineyards, the Agriculture Ministry (http://topics.bloomberg.com/agriculture-ministry/) reported earlier this month.

Wine Shortage The world faces a wine shortage of at least 10 million hectoliters, the equivalent of 1.3 billion bottles, Bertrand Girard, chief executive officer of Groupe Val d’Orbieu, France’s biggest wine cooperative, said on Oct. 18.

The OIV forecast France’s wine production will slide 9.3 million hectoliters, or 19 percent, to 40.5 million hectoliters. Argentina’s output is estimated at 11.8 million hectoliters, falling by 3.69 million hectoliters or 24 percent.

Production in Spain will slide 5.7 percent to 31.5 million hectoliters, while Italy’s wine output is seen dropping 3.4 percent to 40.8 million hectoliters. Italy would pass France as the biggest producer in 2012, based on the OIV estimates.

U.S. wine output, the world’s fourth-largest, is predicted to increase 7.1 percent to 20.6 million hectoliters. Production in Hungary (http://topics.bloomberg.com/hungary/) fell 32 percent and dropped 17 percent in New Zealand (http://topics.bloomberg.com/new-zealand/), according to the OIV documents.

The OIV has its own data for world wine production going back to 1975, according to Magalhaes. Before this year, the lowest production in the period was in 1995, when global output was 254 million hectoliters, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rudy Ruitenberg in Paris at rruitenberg@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Carpenter at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net

Enlarge image http://www.bloomberg.com/image/iNBhMTORpejE.jpg (http://www.bloomberg.com/photo/world-wi ... 54538.html) (http://www.bloomberg.com/photo/world-wi ... 54538.html)

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 3:05 pm
by devi (imported)
They're leaving out the south of England and a few other areas which are now growing grapes (and other berries as in the US) for making wine.

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 5:01 pm
by tugon (imported)
I need to start stocking up on boxes of wine.

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 5:46 pm
by JesusA (imported)
Fortunately, Sonoma County, California – producer of the BEST California wines – had both an extremely large crop and one of the highest quality crops in years. Every winery is filled to capacity and there are still tons of grapes hanging in the vineyards with no place to put them. My son-in-law is making about 400 gallons of Syrah in the barn for family use. (California law allows 200 gallons per year per household. I'm the second household....) A winemaker friend is making 200 gallons of gewurztraminer from our grapes as well, and I expect that there will be some trading going on once it's all bottled.(There are 5 bottles per gallon, so that's 3,000 bottles of wine for 3 households. Anyone planning a visit out this way?)

We probably left 30 tons or so of top quality grapes hanging. There's no way to ship them to France, though.

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 9:39 pm
by tugon (imported)
JesusA (imported) wrote: Mon Nov 05, 2012 5:46 pm Fortunately, Sonoma County, California – producer of the BEST California wines – had both an extremely large crop and one of the highest quality crops in years. Every winery is filled to capacity and there are still tons of grapes hanging in the vineyards with no place to put them. My son-in-law is making about 400 gallons of Syrah in the barn for family use. (California law allows 200 gallons per year per household. I'm the second household....) A winemaker friend is making 200 gallons of gewurztraminer from our grapes as well, and I expect that there will be some trading going on once it's all bottled.(There are 5 bottles per gallon, so that's 3,000 bottles of wine for 3 households. Anyone planning a visit out this way?)

We probably left 30 tons or so of top quality grapes hanging. There's no way to ship them to France, though.

Thank you I needed some good news.

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2012 10:58 pm
by transward (imported)
I suspect many quality wine growers and makers will regard this as good news. While very high end investment wines have skyrocketed the last few years, a world wide glut of wine grapes, often from non traditional sources has depressed the profit for makers of "vin ordinaire." This may well restore profit to many.

Transward

Re: Can It Get Any Worse? Yes, Wine...

Posted: Tue Nov 06, 2012 5:00 am
by butterflyjack (imported)
Thank gawd I quit drinking 18 years ago...And Jesus...Those figures equate to over 3 bottles of wine per day per household...Winos, no doubt...Unless, of course, these are very large households...Bottoms up! Jackie