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French winemakers hit by weather woes allowed to buy-in grapes

Hardest-hit winemakers are allowed to replace their harvests lost to hail and frost by buying grapes from the same area, but finding surplus grapes will be uncertain.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

France has revived a controversial rule allowing winemakers to buy in grapes to cover extensive losses from severe frost and recent hailstorms in some areas, reports Decanter.

Officials abolished the rule last year but have relented after a spate of severe frosts and hailstorms across French vineyards ahead of the 2016 harvest.

Last week’s deluge of hail in Languedoc appeared to be the final straw.

Some growers lost their entire 2016 crop in the Pic-St-Loup area, north of Montpellier.

The rule specifies that growers may purchase up to 80% of their harvest providing the grapes come from the same appellation as the grower’s vineyards.

Wines cannot be sold under the usual brand names, but they can be sold as a new cuvée. The wines would have RM status, which stands for Récoltant Manipulant.

Merchants will likely be upset by the move, after succeeding in having the rule revoked in April last year.

The catch for winemakers lies in finding grapes from the same appellation.

"We lost between 60% and 75% of our crop to late spring frosts,’ said Boris Desbourdes, from Domaine de la Marinière in Chinon in the Loire. "Most of our neighbours are in the same situation, so it will be very difficult to find a suitable grape supply."

It’s a similar story in Pic-St-Loup.

André Leenhardt, of Château de Cazeneuve, lost his entire harvest in last week’s hailstorm.

"The appellation lost 50 to 60% of its potential harvest, so this means there is no extra grape supply available."

Leenhardt and Desbourdes also have issues with the spirit of the rule.

"As independent winemakers, we only want to make wine from grapes we have grown ourselves,"said Desbourdes. "It is the only way to be transparent to our customers."

Leenhardt described the system as a two-edged knife. It can help growers who have no reserves or who face financial pressure, but it could also tempt people to stretch the rules and buy grapes outside the appellation borders.

"Pic-St-Loup has invested a lot in its appellation status," he said. "We need to be extra careful to control the origin as well as the quality this year."

Leenhardt said that he will use reserve stocks rather than buy grapes.

Read more of this report from Decanter.