Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Hangover for Bordeaux wines as Chinese demand dries up

-

Sales of France's famous Bordeaux wines fell sharply last year, winemakers said on Thursday, blaming a poor harvest in 2013 and rapidly slowing demand in China, its main export market.

A total of 685 million bottles of Bordeaux wine were sold in 2014 -- an eight-percent drop on the previous year, according to the CIVB association of Bordeaux winemakers.

The total value of the wine sold came to 3.74 billion euros ($4 billion), a decline of 13 percent compared to the 2013, the association added.

"This drop was expected due to the poor harvest in 2013," said Bernard Farges, head of the CIVB. "We can't sell wine we haven't produced."

Exports, particularly to China and Hong Kong, hammered the overseas sales picture, with declines of nine percent in terms of volume and 17 percent in terms of value.

A crackdown on corruption by China's new leadership has hit sales of Western luxury goods -- including top wines -- as lavish gifts were often used to curry favour with officials.

A worker walks in the vineyard on October 22  2014 in the Chateau Doisy Daene in Barsac  near Bordea...
A worker walks in the vineyard on October 22, 2014 in the Chateau Doisy Daene in Barsac, near Bordeaux, southwestern France
Mehdi Fedouach, AFP/File

The volume of Bordeaux wine was slashed by a fifth last year in China, for several reasons, according to Farges.

"The Chinese market, which has had an incredible rise since 2005, had to slow down," said Farges.

He acknowledged that the "anti-corruption policy of the Chinese government" had hit "the most expensive wines" but also pointed to increased competition from New World wines such as Australian and Chilean vintages.

However, there was also a natural deceleration of the market, he stressed.

Several people set themselves up in China as importers of French wine in 2010 but found a slowing market.

"As a consequence the stocks are taking time to run dry," he said.

Around 300 Chinese importers of French wine have recently gone out of business, said CIVB's representative in China, Thomas Jullien.

The growth in the Chinese wine market has been exponential -- from 2,000 hectolitres in 2000 to 538,000 hectolitres in 2012 when it reached its highest level.

Sales of France’s famous Bordeaux wines fell sharply last year, winemakers said on Thursday, blaming a poor harvest in 2013 and rapidly slowing demand in China, its main export market.

A total of 685 million bottles of Bordeaux wine were sold in 2014 — an eight-percent drop on the previous year, according to the CIVB association of Bordeaux winemakers.

The total value of the wine sold came to 3.74 billion euros ($4 billion), a decline of 13 percent compared to the 2013, the association added.

“This drop was expected due to the poor harvest in 2013,” said Bernard Farges, head of the CIVB. “We can’t sell wine we haven’t produced.”

Exports, particularly to China and Hong Kong, hammered the overseas sales picture, with declines of nine percent in terms of volume and 17 percent in terms of value.

A crackdown on corruption by China’s new leadership has hit sales of Western luxury goods — including top wines — as lavish gifts were often used to curry favour with officials.

A worker walks in the vineyard on October 22  2014 in the Chateau Doisy Daene in Barsac  near Bordea...

A worker walks in the vineyard on October 22, 2014 in the Chateau Doisy Daene in Barsac, near Bordeaux, southwestern France
Mehdi Fedouach, AFP/File

The volume of Bordeaux wine was slashed by a fifth last year in China, for several reasons, according to Farges.

“The Chinese market, which has had an incredible rise since 2005, had to slow down,” said Farges.

He acknowledged that the “anti-corruption policy of the Chinese government” had hit “the most expensive wines” but also pointed to increased competition from New World wines such as Australian and Chilean vintages.

However, there was also a natural deceleration of the market, he stressed.

Several people set themselves up in China as importers of French wine in 2010 but found a slowing market.

“As a consequence the stocks are taking time to run dry,” he said.

Around 300 Chinese importers of French wine have recently gone out of business, said CIVB’s representative in China, Thomas Jullien.

The growth in the Chinese wine market has been exponential — from 2,000 hectolitres in 2000 to 538,000 hectolitres in 2012 when it reached its highest level.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Catherine Berthet (L) and Naoise Ryan (R) join relatives of people killed in the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 Boeing 737 MAX crash at a...

Tech & Science

The groundbreaking initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism.

Tech & Science

Microsoft and Google drubbed quarterly earnings expectations.

Business

There is no statutory immunity. There never was any immunity. Move on.