- Vine pull schemes
Vine pull schemes are programs whereby
grape growers receive a financial incentive to pull up their grapevine s, a process known as "arrachage" in French. A large program of the kind was initiated by theEuropean Union (EU ) in 1988 to reduce thewine lake glut from overproduction and declining demand. In the first five years of the program, growers, mainly in southern France and southern Italy, were paid to destroy 320,000 hectares or 790,400 acres ofvineyard . This was the equivalent to the entire vineyard area of the world’s fourth largest grower of grapes, the United States. The EU has recently resumed a vine pull scheme andPlan Bordeaux proposes additional vine pulls to increase prices forBordeaux wine . Many older growers have come to expect vine pull payments as they near retirement and view them as a retirement bonus.Other vine pull schemes have been implemented in order to encourage destruction of unpopular indigenous varieties and their replacement with internationally popular varieties. This has been the case, for example, in Argentina, Chile, and New Zealand.
ee also
*
French wine
*Italian wine
*Chilean wine
*New Zealand wine
*Argentine wine ource
* Robinson, Jancis (Ed.) "The Oxford Companion to Wine". Oxford: Oxford University Press, second edition, 1999.
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