This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Australian wineries consider teaming up with Chinese wine producers
Australian producers are reportedly reaching out to Chinese wineries to find ways around the anti-dumping tariffs.
Australian winemakers have begun visiting Chinese wine regions such as Qinghai and Ningxia to conduct field study and discuss potential cooperation, reported The Sydney Morning Herald. In particular, representatives from Australian wine giants Treasury Wine Estates and Accolade Wines made recent trips to the vineyards surrounding Helan Mountain in Ningxia located in northwest China.
It is thought that Australian producers are looking for a way around the blockade, as the tariffs are applied to Australian bottles being exported from Australia, not Australian-branded wine produced in China or elsewhere. There are also rumours of potential investment by Australian wine companies in Chinese wineries.
According to The Herald, Chinese producers welcome the idea of partnering with Australian wine companies and appear to have “rolled out the welcome mat”。
Peter Dixon, managing director of Accolade Wines Asia said in a statement that the company has long-established commercial relationships in China.
“We are always open to investigating opportunities to grow the Accolade Wines business around the world, however, we can confirm that there is no planned investment in a winery within China,” he said.
Treasury declined to comment.
Related news
Vignobles Cruse-Lorenzetti shuffles roles across its four Bordeaux chateaux
Is Monastrell the climate-adaptable grape the industry needs?
The story of Maison Simonnet-Febvre’s new Chablis Premier Cru Forêts