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U.S. loses its taste for French wine
International Herald Tribune ^ | 06/30/03 | Craig S. Smith

Posted on 06/29/2003 10:52:53 PM PDT by pcx99

BORDEAUX Something was missing from the country's largest wine fair here last week, and it was not just the air conditioning in one of the exhibition halls (where temperatures rose so high, corks popped). The usual contingent of American wine merchants were mostly absent, confirming to many in the trade fair's bottle-filled booths that American ill will over France's opposition to the war in Iraq has bruised more than egos.

French wine exports to the United States, which was once French winemakers' most promising market and is now one of their greatest competitors, are going down the drain.

"It's clear from our American distributors that there is a hesitation to promote French wines for the time being," said Bruno Finance, sales manager for Yvon Mau, one of Bordeaux's largest wine merchants. He said French wine was losing ground in some other markets, "but as of today the only place there is such a big loss is in the U.S."

The politically tinged backlash comes as French exports to the United States are already suffering from a weak U.S. economy and the dollar's diminished value against the euro, which makes French products more expensive for Americans. Overall French exports to the U.S. dropped by 21 percent in the first four months of the year.

There is no doubt the trans-Atlantic dispute over Iraq has made things worse. American aviation executives were absent from the biannual Paris Air Show this month, and the Pentagon sent fewer of its fancy planes.

France is trying to repair the damage with a maladroit public relations campaign whose tagline is "Let's Fall In Love Again" and features a video in which the aging comedian Woody Allen talks about French kissing his young wife. The Paris Tourism Office said it would decorate the Champs Elysées with stars and stripes on July 4 and that many hotels in the capital would celebrate the American holiday.

But some people worry that the damage might not be so easily repaired. French wines never fully recovered their position in the Scandinavian market after a 1995 boycott there to protest France's nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific that year.

"It gave people the opportunity to try other wines and they never switched back," said Finance amid a clutter of half-filled wine glasses in his company's booth at the fair.

He worries that the political pall over French wines has come at a time when competition is growing and the market is in flux. By the time the pall passes, he said, it may be too late for France to recapture its former cache.

France's heavy winemaking regulations make it difficult for French wines to compete with many American and Australian brands - particularly in the United States, where consumers value the reliability of a standardized product.

American and Australian winemakers can irrigate their vineyards to control the quality of their grapes, for example, or even mellow their wine by adding oak chips to the stainless steel tanks in which the wine is aged. But that is all illegal in France.

French vintners are at the mercy of the weather and if they want to make a mellower wine, they have to invest in expensive, new oak casks. The result is wine that varies in quality from year to year, an unpredictability that is prized by connoisseurs but is lost on the average consumer.

Because of the competition amid a global wine glut, France turned 2.5 million gallons of Beaujolais wine into industrial alcohol last year.

Bordeaux, France's largest wine-producing region, is protected from the American slump somewhat because it can count on loyal imbibers at home. About two-thirds of the wine consumed in France comes from the southwestern winegrowing region.

But the U.S. market is far more important to other French wine regions. The country's American-bound wine exports, which totaled nearly $1 billion in 2002, account for about 16 percent of all the wine France ships abroad.

The volume of those exports fell by 9 percent in the first four months of this year, but the numbers are skewed because they reflect the shipment of Bordeaux wine that was sold before it was bottled two years ago. Bordeaux is one of the few regions in France where wine is pre-sold.

More typical is Bernard Hervet, the director of a large vineyard in eastern France's Burgundy region, who says over a glass of chilled Chablis that his exports to the United States had fallen by nearly a third this year.

Louis Regis Affre, general manager of the France's Federation of Wine and Spirit Exporters, says retail sales of French wine continued to fall sharply in May while overall wine sales in the United States were growing.

"Most French wine promotions in the U.S. have stopped because of the brittleness over Iraq," he said.

Florence Chartrier, who with her husband owns Smith Haut Lafitte, one of Bordeaux's premier vineyards, said that the American market has been receding for years, making it harder for the big properties to sell their wine.

Last year, she said, the vineyard had to cut its prices by 15 percent and it took three hours to sell out its production. But this year, with prices reduced even further, it took two weeks to sell everything - and about 15 percent of those orders are still not confirmed.

"People who normally take five cases are taking one this year," she said from the lawn of her stone chateau overlooking rows of green vines heavy with ripening grapes. "There's a coolness to the market."

Part of the problem in Bordeaux is that the American wine guru Robert Parker canceled his trip to taste the 2002 wine this year, ostensibly because of concern about traveling during the war.

Parker, a Maryland attorney and publisher of The Wine Advocate, normally rates Bordeaux's top wines in the spring after the grapes are harvested. His ratings are so influential that they determine both price and demand for the region's best wines.

"His absence has had such a huge impact that's there's not much consumer demand for the 2002," said Todd Hess, Chicago-based wine director for Sam's Wines Spirits, one of largest wine retailers in the United States.

Hess, one of the Americans who came to the wine fair this year, said the change in the exchange rate is adding to French winemakers' woes. "It's hard to explain to a consumer why a product they've been buying for $6.99 is now $8.99," he said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: boycot; boycott; chirac; france; frog; ingrates; surrendermonkeys; trade; wineboycott
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Slowly but surely we shall teach them that "The customer is always right" -- EVEN WHEN IT IS AMERICA!
1 posted on 06/29/2003 10:52:53 PM PDT by pcx99
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To: pcx99
I'm using my last French bottle for wood stain.
2 posted on 06/29/2003 10:56:43 PM PDT by zarf (fuggetaboutit)
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To: pcx99
I have been able to do without french wines for some time now, It should be pretty easy from here on out.
Viva Italia.
3 posted on 06/29/2003 10:58:35 PM PDT by Pompah
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To: pcx99
A few weeks ago, I had to restock my wine reserves. I did NOT buy any French ones, which I normally do; but rather, doubled up on the Italian and American ones I buy.
4 posted on 06/29/2003 11:00:08 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: pcx99
What an insult that these morons think they can deck a monument in the Stars and Stripes and hire some has been pedophile and we'll just forget everything? Just who do these people think they're dealing with? It's an outrage.
5 posted on 06/29/2003 11:02:39 PM PDT by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: Dark Wing
ping
6 posted on 06/29/2003 11:03:00 PM PDT by Thud
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To: pcx99
Choice is a wonderful thing.Choosing Woody Allen as a spokesman is so absurd one suspects an intel agency of the US planted a mole for decision making!
7 posted on 06/29/2003 11:03:22 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: nopardons
Having friends for the 4th...have purchased 9 bottles of wine...nary a one from France.
8 posted on 06/29/2003 11:04:12 PM PDT by ETERNAL WARMING
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To: zarf
LOL!
9 posted on 06/29/2003 11:04:14 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: ETERNAL WARMING
Welcome to the ever expanding club ! :-)

Maybe we wine drinking/buying FREEPERs should make a thread and list our nonFrench favs; waddya think ?

10 posted on 06/29/2003 11:06:16 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: MEG33
Woody Allen's actions have shown him to have just about the same amount of class as the French - indeed he is a perfect spokesperson for them.
11 posted on 06/29/2003 11:13:09 PM PDT by Logic101 (Yes, the French have as much class as Woody Allen.)
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To: pcx99
So much for the frogs!




LIVE FREE OR DIE!


12 posted on 06/29/2003 11:17:36 PM PDT by autoresponder (. . . . SOME CAN*T HANDLE THE TRUTH . . . THE NYT ESPECIALLY!)
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To: Pompah
For years I drank Perrier on a regular basis. Now I'm doing just fine without it, thank you, and will continue not to drink a drop of it. Buy American brands. Lots of choices and some of the U.S. brand flavored waters, when properly chilled, are terrific! Let's support our own for a change.
13 posted on 06/29/2003 11:21:04 PM PDT by Logic101 (Viva aqua Americana! Let the Perrier gather dust on the shelves.)
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To: pcx99
How can this be? The foul-mouthed pus gut U.S. ambassador to France just insisted the other day that all economic repercussions from France's treachery during the Iraq war were completely history.

For my own part, if I want any lip from that moron, I'll rattle my zipper just remind him that the boycott is still going strong!

-Jay

14 posted on 06/29/2003 11:28:49 PM PDT by Jay D. Dyson (Liberty * Liberalism = Constant)
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To: MEG33
I know watching an old left-wing lecher joke about French-kissing his step-daughter/wife makes me want to run out and buy some French wine.
15 posted on 06/29/2003 11:38:50 PM PDT by Buckwheats
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To: pcx99
http://www.australianwines.com.au/contents.html try some you'll like it..
16 posted on 06/29/2003 11:40:06 PM PDT by wolficatZ
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To: Buckwheats
I tell you it had to be a plot!
17 posted on 06/29/2003 11:41:57 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: pcx99
American and Australian winemakers can irrigate their vineyards to control the quality of their grapes, for example, or even mellow their wine by adding oak chips to the stainless steel tanks in which the wine is aged. But that is all illegal in France.

French vintners are at the mercy of the weather and if they want to make a mellower wine, they have to invest in expensive, new oak casks. The result is wine that varies in quality from year to year, an unpredictability that is prized by connoisseurs but is lost on the average consumer.

No wonder California wine tastes better year in and year out, and is cheaper to boot. Socialism at work.

18 posted on 06/29/2003 11:44:42 PM PDT by Hugin
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To: MEG33
Ya know, you might be on to something there. And, arrogance lends itself to such a thing.
19 posted on 06/29/2003 11:45:00 PM PDT by Buckwheats
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To: Buckwheats
hehe
20 posted on 06/29/2003 11:45:49 PM PDT by MEG33
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