The Sunday Guardian

Carbon dating can expose fake Scotch: Research

- CORRESPOND­ENT

A large number of rare and collectabl­e whiskies, sometimes sold for hundreds of thousand of pounds, are likely to be fake, researcher­s have found. Investigat­ors from the Scottish Universiti­es Environmen­tal Research Centre used carbon-dating to sample 55 bottles of Scotch bought through the second- ary market, discoverin­g that 21 were outright fakes or not distilled in the year declared, Rare Whisky 101, which commission­ed the study, said.

The sale of rare collectors’ whiskies is more and more popular, and this October a 60-year-old The Macallan Valerio Adami 1926 was sold for record 848,750 pounds ($1.08 million) at auction.

Researcher­s look at minute levels of radiocarbo­n absorbed by the barley used to make Scotland’s flagship export to determine its age. Those with higher levels of radiocarbo­n must have been distilled prior to the 1950s nuclear era, they said.

The accuracy of the process is such that they can pinpoint likely distillati­on years to within a two to three-year period after the 1950s, and a wider period before.

“It is our genuine belief that every purported pre-1900 - and in many cases much later - bottle should be assumed fake until proven genuine, certainly if the bottle claims to be a single malt Scotch whisky,” said David Robertson, co-founder of Rare Whisky 101, which publishes insight and intelligen­ce for whisky collectors. “This problem will only grow as prices for rare bottles continue to increase,” he added. REUTERS

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