Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




FARM NEWS
California winemakers tap into growing Chinese market
by Staff Writers
Napa, California (AFP) June 24, 2012


The global downturn hit Doug Hill's family-run Napa Valley winery hard. But the third-generation California farmer's hopes for recovery are strong -- fueled by heady growth in China.

It's a long way from his sun-dappled vineyards north of San Francisco to pollution-shrouded Beijing and Shanghai, but that's where his Hill Family Estate bottles have been heading since last year.

"We're cautiously optimistic about it," said Hill, who visited China last September and was struck first by the smog -- "My first impression was, where's the sky?" -- but then by the phenomenal signs of growth and wealth.

"There's an upwardly mobile class of people we believe could afford to drink our wines. It wouldn't take a very large percent of the 1.3-1.6 billion people there to create a good market," he added, showing AFP round his hillside vines.

China was the fifth largest export destination for US wine last year, raking in some $62 million -- a fraction compared for example to the $400 million (322 million euros) worth of French Bordeaux sold annually to the Asian giant.

But that US export figure was nearly 30 percent up on 2010, and that trend is expected to continue, according to the Wine Institute, which advocates on behalf of over 1,000 wineries in the western US state.

China was granted Permanent Normal Trade Relations with the US a decade ago, and "the wine was just a trickle back then," said Wine Institute communications manager Gladys Horiuchi.

"Now it's the fifth largest market and... obviously, it will continue to grow just because of the huge potential there, the growing middle class," she added.

That potential was highlighted last year when retired National Basketball Association (NBA) star Yao Ming launched his own Napa Valley winery, Yao Family Wines.

-- Asleep at the wheel --

The company named after Shanghai-born Yao, who at 7 feet 6 inches (2.28 meters) was the tallest player in the NBA, launched its inaugural Yao Ming 2009 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon in mainland China, before selling in the US this year.

While there is clearly a Californian wine push into China, some say Napa Valley will never rival the French or even Australian success in the Chinese market, unless they get serious about marketing.

"The opportunity is tremendous, but Napa Valley is not working seriously enough to capture consumers in China," said Mario Sculatti, a wine consultant and trader based in Saint Helena, in the heart of the Napa Valley.

He added: "The Bordelais and the Burgundians and basically all the regions in France, especially Bordeaux, are pouring government dollars into marketing wines in Asia.

"Napa Valley is asleep at the wheel. Countries like Australia and France are dominating the trade over there."

Back in the vineyards, Doug Hill -- whose son Ryan is taking on the fourth generation of Hill Family Estate business -- recounted how he first stumbled on the idea that China might help them recover from the 2008 financial crash.

"It was challenging to sell wine, especially during the initial stages of the recession. Mostly restaurants were having a really challenging time in America," he said.

"Certain distributors, their market just came to a standstill unless the price points were really low. And that was lower than what was... commercially viable for us in a lot of areas."

Then last year, Hill heard about a Chinese-born businessman based in Oregon, just up the US West Coast, offering to buy wines from California, Oregon and Washington state, and sell directly in China.

Best of all, the middle-man could deal with Chinese customs bureaucracy in a way that small Californian winemakers would find impossible.

A key issue in counterfeit-plagued China was proving the wine is authentic. "If you look at the cultural values in China, there are some real challenges doing business there," he said.

-- Tremendous growth --

The middle-man has been determined to build "a very credible business, that says, 'Look these are real farm families or small winemaking families, that are doing this, and this is the real thing, its not counterfeit'," said Hill.

His September visit convinced him, even if the sun-tanned Californian admitted to being shocked by the pollution in Beijing, and elsewhere.

"We took a high-speed train 1,500 kilometers down to Shanghai, and I never saw blue sky once. Five hours, at 300 kilometers per hour. And it was 'Oh my God, this entire country has a level of pollution I've almost never seen before," he said.

But the evidence of economic growth was eye-popping. "The other thing that I saw, during the five hours I spent on the train, I saw more construction cranes than the previous 59 years of my life," he said.

Hill's son Ryan, who visited China himself in March, said exports to the country were already 10 percent of the company's business.

"We're looking for tremendous growth... I think we can only go up, because we're just now exposing a product in a market that is totally unsaturated. It's like being an actor, going to LA and only having five people there."

But consultant Sculatti still thinks Napa is missing a huge opportunity, and needs to make a coordinated marketing and branding push to compete with the history of French winemakers who have been in China for generations.

"All the efforts that are being made are by a very few wineries who are spending their own capital to develop the market in Asia. There's no cohesive effort that I see as working," he said.

"The quality is definitely there, but what Napa Valley hasn't done yet is really show the prestige, the quality and the story to the Asians. That's the biggest mis-step that's happening."

He stressed: "Napa Valley has an opportunity because of its rarity, as far as acres (of vineyards). If it just figured out how to brand itself... (it) could really catch the attention of the Chinese better."

.


Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FARM NEWS
Trouble on the horizon for GM crops?
Tucson AZ (SPX) Jun 25, 2012
Resistance of cotton bollworm to insect-killing cotton plants involves more diverse genetic changes than expected, an international research team reports in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. To decrease sprays of broad-spectrum insecticides, which can harm animals other than the target pests, cotton and corn have been genetically engineered to produce toxins derived fr ... read more


FARM NEWS
USAF officials announce milestone Atlas V launch

EVE Underflight Calibration Sounding Rocket Launch

ILS and AsiaSat Announce a New Contract for an ILS Proton Launch

A milestone in launcher preparations for Arianespace's fourth Ariane 5 flight of 2012

FARM NEWS
Extensive Water in Mars Interior

Orbiter Out of Precautionary 'Safe Mode'

Researchers calculate size of particles in Martian clouds of CO2 snow

ESA tests self-steering rover in 'Mars' desert

FARM NEWS
Researchers Estimate Ice Content of Crater at Moon's South Pole

Researchers find evidence of ice content at the moon's south pole

Nanoparticles found in moon glass bubbles explain weird lunar soil behaviour

UA Lunar-Mining Team Wins National Contest

FARM NEWS
It's a Sim: Out in Deep Space, New Horizons Practices the 2015 Pluto Encounter

Beyond Pluto And Exploring the Kuiper Belt

Uranus auroras glimpsed from Earth

Herschel images extrasolar analogue of the Kuiper Belt

FARM NEWS
Forgotten Star Cluster Useful For Solar Science And Search for Earth Like Planets

SciTechTalk: Quick, name the planets!

Where Are The Metal Worlds And Is The Answer Blowing In The Wind

Metal-poor stars are rich with small planets

FARM NEWS
X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle lands at Vandenberg

China develops new rocket engine

2nd Boeing-built X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle Successfully Completes 1st Flight

Secret U.S. space plane prepares to land

FARM NEWS
Man Versus Machine on Shenzhou

Above and below, Chinese science soars

China conducts first manual space docking

That's No Lab, It's a Space Station

FARM NEWS
Arecibo Observatory Finds Asteroid 2012 LZ1 To Be Twice As Big As First Believed

NASA Releases Workshop Data and Findings on Asteroid 2011 AG5

Dawn Easing into its Final Science Orbit

'Unusually large' asteroid to race by Earth




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement