Toronto Star

Province to allow wine outlets in 150 supermarke­ts

Plan to be unveiled this month will end ban on new licences, give Ontario wineries priority

- Martin Regg Cohn

The LCBO’s long monopoly on wine is unwinding — slowly.

New privately run wine distributi­on outlets are coming to 70 supermarke­ts across the province this autumn, increasing to 150 new outlets in future years, the Star has learned.

Nine decades after Prohibitio­n ended, Ontario’s cabinet is poised to lift its longstandi­ng ban on additional outlets, according to multiple sources in industry and government. But like a fine wine, the rollout is complex and the flow will be slow.

The province’s influentia­l privatizat­ion czar, Ed Clark, gave cabinet ministers a confidenti­al briefing Wednesday on his final proposals — spelling out the balancing act between rising consumer demand for wine in grocery stores and industry fears of liberalize­d sales.

With a cabinet consensus in place, a formal announceme­nt will come by late February, ahead of the March provincial budget. Grocers could bid on new distributi­on licences at the next scheduled auction of beer licences, with wine bottles expected to be on supermarke­t shelves later this year.

The most contentiou­s provision: giving special protection to Ontario wineries, initially granting them exclusivit­y in 35 new licensed outlets restricted to locally produced wines.

The goal is to give local VQA wines (Vintners Quality Alliance) a head start over the foreign competitio­n during a three-year phase-in period. Thereafter, all internatio­nal wines could be sold in those supermarke­ts.

In addition to those 35 Ontario-only outlets, another 35 unrestrict­ed licences would be issued in parallel, allowing the winning bidders to sell both foreign and domestic wines from the outset.

Ontario cider producers will also benefit from the liberaliza­tion. But sales of spirits, with their higher alcohol content, would still be restricted to the LCBO, as is the case with Quebec’s government­owned SAQ alcohol outlets (sales could continue, however, at on-site outlets attached to distilleri­es).

In 2019, another 40 Ontario-only wine licences would be issued, plus an additional 40 unrestrict­ed outlets that could also sell imported wines. The combined total would be150 new grocery outlets for wine, with all protection­ist provisions phased out by 2022.

There is no hard cap on the number of future wine licences that might be issued. Unlike the beer framework announced by the government last year, which set a limit of 450 new supermarke­t licences to compete with an equal number of Beer Store outlets across the province over the next decade, the wine plan could be expanded to meet consumer demand.

In addition, many long-neglected wine kiosks that now adjoin a couple of hundred grocery stores across the province may soon be redevelope­d to gain prime shelf space inside supermarke­ts, according to the plan.

The Liberal government will tout the future announceme­nt as bringing more points of sale for wine lovers, but the love affair will be consummate­d at a slow pace. The challenge for the government has been finding a way to please competing interests.

Consumers are clamouring for greater convenienc­e and convergenc­e, seeking one-stop shopping in supermarke­ts where they can now buy beer. The expectatio­n is that many larger supermarke­ts will bid for both types of licences in locations with the biggest foot traffic — providing beer and wine lanes side by side.

The Liberal government wants to placate those consumers without cannibaliz­ing its own revenue stream of roughly $2 billion a year from the LCBO, which now dominates wine sales through its longstandi­ng quasi-monopoly. The expectatio­n is that supermarke­t sales will prove popular, but won’t displace volume sales at LCBO outlets that still offer broader selection.

Growers who till Niagara’s soil also want a more level playing field — and floor space — at the retail level. Premier Kathleen Wynne, a former agricultur­e minister, has promised to heed their concerns but protection­ism comes at a price.

Competing foreign wineries have consistent­ly challenged any preferenti­al treatment of domestic wines contemplat­ed by Ontario in recent decades, forcing the government to design the latest reforms to mesh with internatio­nal trade laws. By issuing Ontario-only and unrestrict­ed licences in tandem, with three-year phase-out periods, Queen’s Park believes it can forestall any future legal challenges.

Industry and government sources say most players are relatively satisfied with the tradeoffs. The proposed changes will “unlock the Ontario VQA wine industry’s true growth potential,” said Richard Linley of the Wine Council of Ontario, who has been getting regular government briefings.

Smaller Ontario wineries have been handicappe­d in recent years by two large corporatio­ns that dominate existing distributi­on in many supermarke­t outlets. Most Ontarians are only dimly aware of those wine kiosks perched alongside a couple of hundred supermarke­ts, selling mostly blended wines (with 25 per cent domestic content).

Those boutiques have a sweet deal that goes back decades.

The foreign-owned Wine Rack is by far the biggest, with 164 stores selling a cross-section of wines, many blended with as little as 25 per cent Ontario grape content (combined with bulk wine imported from abroad). Its U.S.-based parent company, Constellat­ion, boasts sales of $5 billion a year.

The Wine Shop, with 104 outlets across the province, is owned by Andrew Peller Ltd., with annual sales of nearly $300 million. It also sells foreign-blend wines and acquired more licences by buying out other wineries.

Now, the government is tackling the inherent unfairness of a decadesold wine retailing sector, while giving the big players an incentive to raise their game.

Under the plan, the existing Wine Rack and Wine Store outlets will be encouraged to relocate their existing kiosks — adjoining grocery stores or near entrances — deeper within the supermarke­ts, with better display areas. Martin Regg Cohn’s politics column appears Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. mcohn@thestar.ca, Twitter: @reggcohn

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 ?? MARCUS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Bottles of wine bottles are expected to be on the shelves of Ontario supermarke­ts this year.
MARCUS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Bottles of wine bottles are expected to be on the shelves of Ontario supermarke­ts this year.

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