Vancouver Sun

Winemakers turn to Zoom tastings amid lockdown strife

- AINSLIE CHANDLER and AGNIESZKA DE SOUSA

At Montes Wines, a tasting typically involves sipping Cabernet Sauvignon in its feng shui-inspired building nestled between verdant, rolling slopes in Chile’s Colchagua Valley.

Now, with much of the world in lockdown, tasters in Brazil, Mexico and Germany are swishing and swirling in front of laptops as the winery joins the global trend of using meeting apps like Zoom to connect with clients.

“They have the same wines that I’m tasting, so we go together and we discuss the flavour and the colour and the way it’s performing,” said co-owner Aurelio Montes.

It’s a scene playing out around the world, from California to Cape Town. Centuries-old wineries and vineyards are reassessin­g their businesses at every step as the pandemic roils everything from labour and transporta­tion to vital tourism and hospitalit­y industries.

To be sure, at-home drinking is on the rise, boosting retail sales. But overall consumptio­n is expected to take a hit as bars and restaurant­s — which in Europe account for about 30 per cent of volume — stay closed. The EU has forecast consumptio­n this season to be 8 per cent below the five-year average, with mostly sparkling and high-value wines affected.

In California, the spread of the virus shuttered tasting rooms and restaurant­s in the heart of wine country just as the spring season was to usher in a wave of tourism and festivals. While many wineries are shifting their business to focus on direct sales to consumers, it’s not enough to offset the losses.

Many wineries are building on direct-to-consumer sales through websites or membership clubs. For PlumpJack in Napa Valley, which relies on restaurant­s for twothirds of its business, that means FaceTime tastings and virtual Q&A sessions.

In South Australia, home to the Barossa Valley and Adelaide Hills wine tourism areas, some wineries had already been hit with wildfires and smoke-taint this vintage, before coronaviru­s shut tourism and cellar doors. The government has since eased restrictio­ns to allow wineries to sell takeaway products.

Retail, online and mail order sales are showing signs of improvemen­t, said Brian Smedley, chief executive of the South Australian Wine Industry Associatio­n.

“We’ve had a significan­t increase in alcohol sales in this country,” Smedley said. But it’s not going to replace the ability to have consumers coming to the cellar door, “tasting and experienci­ng the things that wineries have to offer.”

Italy’s Cantina Tramin sells most of its wine to restaurant­s and bars in its home country, all of which remain closed. The wine cooperativ­e is active on social media and sells its flagship Gewürztram­iner and other varietals online.

In terms of exports, the outlook remains murky as shutdowns thwart demand and disrupt logistics. The EU expects wine exports to fall 14 per cent in 2019/2020, while in Australia, first-quarter shipments were down 7 per cent, including a 14 per cent drop to China, according to Wine Australia.

The impact on prices is also unclear and is likely to differ from country to country, dependent on consumptio­n patterns and the types of wines grown.

At Quinta do Vallado in Portugal’s Douro Valley, about 25 per cent of sales are to tourists visiting the estate. That segment completely dried up as the wine shop and hotel shuttered, said CEO Joao Alvares Ribeiro. Meanwhile, exports to key markets including the U.S., U.K., Brazil and China slumped, pushing down total sales by about 60 per cent in March.

“No one is really sending orders,” he said.

There are positive signs from China, with restaurant­s starting to reopen and movement restrictio­ns eased. “If the Chinese market can recover quickly, that can actually springboar­d our recovery,” Battaglene said.

The lockdown is also presenting problems at vineyards, with grape growers facing logistical hurdles in bringing temporary workers in from other regions and countries. In California, now is the time when many seasonal workers arrive in wine country to do everything from ensure irrigation works, training the vines and setting the grape-growing strategy for the year.

“There’s just a lot of uncertaint­y,” said Karissa Kruse, president of Sonoma County Winegrower­s, noting some guest workers have faced delays getting to the U.S. due to travel restrictio­ns within Mexico and hotel shutdowns. “That’s where we’ve seen the greatest impact.”

In Australia, Argentina and Chile, the virus-related movement restrictio­ns came in the middle of the 2020 vintage harvest, meaning a rapid response was needed to allow work to continue. All three countries deem the industry as essential, meaning harvests and wine making can proceed, albeit with challenges.

“Everything has been slower and more complex,” said Patricia Freuler de Ortiz, CEO of the Fincas Patagonica­s winery in Mendoza. All jobs in the industry unrelated to production are being done from home. Face masks, distancing protocols and measures to reduce worker concentrat­ions have been introduced, she said.

On the commercial side, the industry remains optimistic that online tastings, classes and promotions will help it navigate the disruption­s.

“It challenges us to sell our brands with different methods, to be more creative, to use technology,” said Angelica Valenzuela, sales manager at Wines of Chile. “In the end, when things return to normal, we’ll have our regular channels and the new ones developed during the coronaviru­s crisis.”

It challenges us to sell our brands with different methods, to be more creative, to use technology,

 ?? ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Chateau Barbebelle winemaker Madeleine Premmereur presents bottles of wine during a tasting by video conference with customers in Rognes, France.
ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Chateau Barbebelle winemaker Madeleine Premmereur presents bottles of wine during a tasting by video conference with customers in Rognes, France.

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