Australian Wine Industry Statistics
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2005 9:26 am
My copy of "The Australian and New Zealand Wine Industry Directory 2005" arrived on Thursday. I haven't had time to read a lot yet, but a few figures:
Number of wineries: 1,899 (up from 1,798 and there are quite a few small makers missing from the detailed section as well, so I'd guess at over 2,000 wine producers now). NZ only increased from 457 to 458 after a big jump from 386 the year before.
2004 Vintage tonnage: 1,065,879 red grapes, 794,473 white grapes, a 38% and 42% increase respectively on the 2003 vintage, no wonder there is a glut of young red wine. NZ vintage tonnage jumped by over 100% compared to 2003!
Wine stocks: Stocks rose by 17.2% to 1,854 million litres, 59.8% of that is red/rose, an increase of 17.8%.
Biggest producers (branded wine):: Hardy's jumped to top spot over Southcorp, followed by Orlando-Wyndham, McGuigan-Simeon, Casella Wines, Beringer Blass, de Bortoli, McWilliams, Yalumba and Angove making the top 10.
World production: Australia is the 7th largest producer of wine, after france, Italy, Spain, USA, Argentina and China and a fairly distant 4th in the export stakes behind Italy, France and Spain.
Number of wineries: 1,899 (up from 1,798 and there are quite a few small makers missing from the detailed section as well, so I'd guess at over 2,000 wine producers now). NZ only increased from 457 to 458 after a big jump from 386 the year before.
2004 Vintage tonnage: 1,065,879 red grapes, 794,473 white grapes, a 38% and 42% increase respectively on the 2003 vintage, no wonder there is a glut of young red wine. NZ vintage tonnage jumped by over 100% compared to 2003!
Wine stocks: Stocks rose by 17.2% to 1,854 million litres, 59.8% of that is red/rose, an increase of 17.8%.
Biggest producers (branded wine):: Hardy's jumped to top spot over Southcorp, followed by Orlando-Wyndham, McGuigan-Simeon, Casella Wines, Beringer Blass, de Bortoli, McWilliams, Yalumba and Angove making the top 10.
World production: Australia is the 7th largest producer of wine, after france, Italy, Spain, USA, Argentina and China and a fairly distant 4th in the export stakes behind Italy, France and Spain.