Feeds

Ciatti Global Market Report, April 2022

“The global wine industry,” wrote Rabobank in its latest Wine Quarterly, “has evolved in a context of cheap freight, cheap energy, and declining trade barriers […] these assumptions may be far less certain than we had previously assumed”. We echo this message, though we see each of the three assumptions being challenged to differing extents. 

The last issue cited, the re-emergence of trade barriers, can be attributable to localised political volatility that eventually passes: for example, the US-EU aircraft subsidies dispute appears to be over, so too Brexit’s acutest effects on trade. The world is united in hoping the Russia-Ukraine conflict, too, ends imminently. Such wounds to global trade are patched-up by workarounds and innovation; trade adjusts to the new realities, and carries on. China’s blocking of Australian wine imports is an opportunity for red wine suppliers elsewhere in the world, for example. 

Of greater fundamental concern to the wine trade globally are the freight and energy challenges. Both are intrinsically linked, of course, but if we take them in turn: shipping rates experienced exponential growth in 2021 as there is high demand and a shortage of containers. There is also a shortage of vessels. Vessels take years to build and new or imminent emissions laws are making current designs redundant, effectively placing a moratorium on new construction. Shipping, like haulage, is generally concentrated in few hands, reducing price competition and slowing innovation. 

Energy supply, also, is concentrated in few hands – the Russia-Ukraine conflict has highlighted some European nations’ reliance on Russian oil and gas, for example – and green levies are in some markets compounding the rising cost. The annual energy bill for UK households increased by an average of GBP693 (USD904, EUR756) from this month. Spain and Portugal are temporarily withdrawing from the EU’s internal energy market in order to cut prices for their citizens. Measures are being introduced to ease record fuel prices: the UK has cut fuel duty by GBP0.05/litre; France has introduced an EUR0.15/litre rebate. But fuel poverty is likely to drag back consumer spending this year. 

Rabobank references a “regionalization of supply chains” in response to rising shipping and fuel prices, with companies moving production closer to the endconsumer. We are seeing shipping, once some way down the list of concerns during transactions, becoming in some cases the first discussion point. There is a growth in what might be termed “supply chain parochialism”: while some buyers are casting the net wider for sourcing options that maintain margin, others are ruling-out wines located at a distance or in a specific location so as to avoid high shipping costs and/or delays. 

The freight and energy challenges are here to stay in 2022 and potentially well into 2023. But a potent weapon in offsetting challenges has returned after a two-year absence: wine fairs are back, and with them a greater ability to build new relationships, enhance existing ones, and mutually establish workarounds to business impediments. 

April brought Alimentaria in Barcelona (busy, and “everyone was happy to see everyone in person”); May brings Fenavin in Ciudad Real and ProWein in Düsseldorf and Ciatti will be attending both, out in force at the latter as in pre-COVID days, with a stand – G24 – in Hall 12. It’s going to be great to see you! In the meantime, read on for detailed updates from each market, and stay safe. 

Read the full report

Bulk Wine Grape Market

About

WINThe Wine Industry Advisor is an Online Industry Publication featuring news and articles relevant to the wine industry. Our goal is to be a resource for wine businesses and professionals by providing free access to our knowledge base articles, industry press releases, and daily news. We aim to provide you with the information most relevant to you.

Wine Industry Advisor
155 Foss Creek Circle
Healdsburg, CA 95448
(707) 433-2557
editor@wineindustryadvisor.com

Afternoon Brief

The Afternoon Brief is a summary of daily news headlines and top stories packaged in an email format and delivered to subscribers at the end of each business day. Subscription is provide for free to wine industry professionals.

Learn more & Subscribe

Expert Editorial Guidelines

The Wine Industry Advisor welcomes articles from industry experts; however, we ask that your article follow these simple editorial guidelines. Expert Editorials are intended as a means for you to share your expertise with the Wine Industry Advisor community and not as an advertising piece. This doesn't mean that you cannot mention your company name or product in the article, but that the bulk of the article should be focused on sharing original, valuable wine industry specific information with the readers. The suggested length is 500 to 700 words, and we encourage you to include any images you have the rights to use.

You will be credited as the article's author with name and company logo as well as a link to your website or Wine Industry Network profile. If you are interested in writing an Expert Editorial for the Wine Industry Advisor, please contact editor@wineindustryadvisor.com with a brief summary of your article. All submissions are subject to review by the Wine Industry Advisor, which retains editorial privilege.

Expert Editorial examples

News Releases

The Wine Industry Advisor strives to be a resource of industry news and knowledge for wine business professionals. If your company, association, or institution has a press release that is relevant to the wine industry, please send it to editor@wineindustryadvisor.com and include the word press release in the subject line. We welcome inclusion of photos, logos, and links to additional information. All submissions will be screened for wine industry relevance by the editor before publishing to the press release section.

Contact

Contact List

Title Name Email Phone Extension
Contact contact@wineindustrynetwork.com 707-433-2557

Location List

Locations Address State Country Zip Code
Wine Industry Advisor 155 Foss Creek Circle, Healdsburg CA United States of America 95448

List of Locations