site.btaBulgaria Sells Half of Its Wine Abroad
ESD  12:15:00  04-12-2014
 SN1215ES.105
 105 ECONOMY - WINE INDUSTRY - INTERVIEW
 
 Bulgaria Sells
 Half of Its Wine
 Abroad
 
 
 Plovdiv, South Central Bulgaria, December 4 (BTA) - Half of 
 Bulgaria's wine is sold abroad, while imported wine holds 
 between 12 and 13 per cent of the Bulgarian market, National 
 Vine and Wine Chamber President Radoslav Radev said in a BTA 
 interview earlier this week.
 
 Bulgarian wine is exported mainly to Russia, Poland, the Czech 
 Republic, the United Kingdom and Germany, which have been buying
 it for decades. The domestic market also has much potential, 
 which should be tapped diligently and using the correct 
 marketing approach, Radev said. According to him, efforts should
 be made to boost sales to all of these markets and, more 
 importantly, to move up into higher price ranges.
 
 Another major goal is to make sure that Bulgarian wine has 
 lasting presence in the United States, Canada, China and Japan, 
 where it is sold only occasionally at present, Radev said.
 
 Bulgarian vine growers had a worse crop this autumn compared 
 with previous seasons, which was due to bad weather throughout 
 2014. Early estimates put the amount of the crop at 200,000 
 tonnes, Radev said. He believes that even though grape prices 
 have risen, wine prices will not follow suit, because wine 
 makers have reserves from past years.
 
 He does not fear that Bulgarian wine makers may fail to fulfill 
 their contracts for sale at home or abroad, because the crop of 
 2013 had been rather good both in terms of quantity and quality,
 so many producers still have wine from this and earlier 
 harvests.
 
 Radev noted that there has always been a surplus of wine in the 
 European Union. The bloc has used various mechanisms to deal 
 with the problem over the years, such as limiting the right to 
 plant new vines, limiting crop amounts, or implementing 
 emergency distillation or voluntary distillation. Bulgaria has 
 always produced and exported wine amid strong competition from 
 other countries of Europe and the world, so the current 
 situation is nothing new, Radev commented. The fact that about a
 dozen new wine cellars emerge in Bulgaria every year shows that
 this is a lucrative sector offering good rates of return on 
 investment, he noted.
 
 In recent years, wine making has been strongly influenced by 
 modern forms of trading such as supermarkets and hypermarkets. 
 Nearly 80 per cent of the world's wine is sold through such 
 outlet chains. This requires a radically different approach than
 the philosophy of the wine industry in the 19th and 20th 
 centuries, Radev said.
 
 Restaurant clients show much interest in imported wines, but 
 this should be viewed as part of the developing wine culture of 
 Bulgarians, which has implications for all market participants, 
 he said.
 
 In Bulgaria, as in the rest of the world, demand for wine is 
 focused on the lower price ranges. As for the varieties, there 
 is a definite interest in exotic varieties which began to be 
 grown in the country in recent years, he said.
 
 The National Programme to Support the Vine and Wine Sector 
 supports the uprooting of old vines and the planting of new 
 ones, the construction of soil erosion control systems and drip 
 irrigation facilities, and investments in wine making. Radev 
 said this was perhaps the first programme to be launched in 
 Bulgaria in the new programming period from 2014 to 2020, and 
 the launch was very successful, with 65 projects proposed after 
 the first call for bids. He is convinced that the industry will 
 continue to work on all measures as it has prepared many 
 projects. Another important instrument is the Rural Development 
 Programme, Radev said. 
 
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