Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Update from the World's Largest Organic Wine Fair: Millésime Celebrating Its 31st Anniversary

Held in Montpelier this year, its usual location, the largest organic wine fair in the world was a success yet again as the market for organic drinks across different alcoholic beverage types expands.

Here's what the group posted on its LinkedIn page today:

"Despite the agricultural movement, visitors were there with nearly 10,000 visits in three days...

2024 was a great edition that demonstrates the dynamics of the show with new features such as a common area for organic alcohols, spaces in the wine library for biodynamic wines and bulk wines or the "Biodiversity, it's my domain!" competition which rewarded 9 winegrowers who had implemented an approach aimed at strengthening the resilience of ecosystems..." 

Jeanne Fabre, President of SudVinBio's Organic Millésime Commission

Having just attended the vineyards and biodiversity conference in Avignon, sponsored by OIV, I look forward to sharing more of the biodiversity efforts going on in the EU.

Bravo to Millésime for carrying the flag forward and educating buyers about the importance of good farming practices for the health of all.

Tuesday, January 9, 2024

GunBun Drops New Video on its Regenerative Organic Certification

Telling the story is important. And you can so feel the difference here in this video between a family owned winery and one owned by a corporation. 


Thank you, GunBun, for including your vineyard manager, too!

Saturday, January 6, 2024

Biodiversity and Ecosystem Approach at Chateau Galoupet

As I get ready to head to Avignon for the second Vineyards and Biodiversity conference Jan 18-19, thoughts of the first one are running through my head. At that time, Mathieu Meyer, Estate Director of Château Galoupet, presented what their impressive team of scientists and viticulturists are doing to restore native ecology on the estate, which is dedicated to (organic) rosé.

You can see how far they've come today here:


For more info, visit their site.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Author Picks: Favorites I Wrote About for Wine Business in 2023

Here are some of my favorite stories from the year that was–they were stories that I learned the most from researching and writing or that reflected BIG trends in the wine industry. 

Napa Valley Grape Growers Cut Roundup Use in Half, Evaluate Weed Control Strategies Amidst Shifting Consumer and Community Opinions

Who knew (until the Napa Valley Grapegrowers' data analyst presented the numbers) that the county's growers had cut their Roundup use in half in the last five years. 


The Wine Industry Financial Symposium each year presents an outstanding program of business-oriented topics and this was one of the best of the 2023 event. There is hope –and action–by telling your story. I was impressed by what local agents are doing to persuade insurers to rethink the numbers.

Supermarket Giants Safeway and Albertsons Enter the World of Online Fine Wine with Direct Shipping

For most people, the supermarket IS their wine store, so how exciting to see the megachain taking its wine marketing muscle to a broader audience. It will be interesting to see how successful Safeway et al are. Since most wine is sold at supermarkets, wineries should be excited, too–a big opportunity to increase upsell. 


It sounded like sci fi but it wasn't. Until the international biodiversity report on invasive alien species came out I, like most wine writers/journalists (and I'm sorry to say this) have not paid attention to the fact that most chemical agriculture exists to counteract the impact of invasive species. And then in the country's sites–the potential scourge of the spotted lanternfly is on the horizon. While industry leaders bemoan declining wine sales, the lanternfly threat is far more serious, if less immediately apparent. It could wipe out the entire wine industry in a flash. Let's hope, of course, that it doesn't get that chance. Some scientists are focused on solutions.


This story seemed to have hit a nerve, as it showed up as the most popular one on WineBusiness.com for days and days after it was first posted. Once dismissed as irrelevant and for teetotalers only, this segment is grow grow growing. And for reasons, people didn't usually think of–like, I want to keep drinking with my friends, I have to drive home, but I'll just make my third glass of wine NA.  

From Wood Chips and Mushroom Extracts to Vintner Coalitions: Government Funded Ecosystem Restoration Projects Enhance Vineyard Resilience

A fire remediation story no one has written about, but everyone should be writing about. Let's chart a better roadmap to resilience than the conventional "wisdom" offers.  

California Pesticide Regulators Set a New Course to Reduce Toxic Chemicals

In keeping with the international move to safer conventional farming, California's collected a diverse group of what I call "the lambs and the lions"–i.e. a wide spectrum of opinions and needs on conventional farming chemicals. This groundbreaking consortium laid out policy recommendations that the ag industry can expect to see implemented. Subsequent signaling from DPR shows that fumigant reduction tops the list. 

Just a Cool Video

 I wish we saw more thinking (and videos) like this in the U.S. This is a very cool bucket list.