Polymer wrote:I'm not suggesting Phylloxera isn't bad...or they shouldn't do things to prevent it..but if I had a small winery, I'd certainly be hedging my bets...not hoping it never happens and then having to replant....and wait years until I can get something useful out of the vines....
No business would be happy to decommission part (even a small part) of their working machinery of production for say 3-4 years minimum, when that machinery itself is not the issue. Particularly when it appears that the current regulatory apparatus works effectively to give that machinery a full life span.
I agree that if the rootstock makes no difference to the wine (would like to see more on this), that it would be prudent to replace vines that are due to be replaced with new rootstock to insure against the event of phlloxera arriving. I also agree that "grown on its own rootstock" is not a selling point I have seen on any bottle anywhere (but there are plenty of wines I yet hope to try!!). Nevertheless, regardless of its merits, the "old vine" selling point is used and the changes may affect that significantly.
Most importantly, to face producers with either an increased risk of an infestation which would be cataclysmic to a small producer or to force them to decrease production and replace a proportion of perfectly healthy vines (and the work/costs associated with that) until they are all on rootstock because the regulator wants to relax the regulatory environment is simply shifting costs from those that will benefit from the deregulation to those that currently benefit from the regulation.
In my view policy change is sometimes best examined in terms of who wins and who loses as a result. In this instance it is instructive, as the winners will undoubtedly be the larger producers who will benefit from the freer movement of grapes and particularly equipment. The losers will be the smaller producers who have no need for such things, but will have additional costs imposed by the changes if they are to secure against infestation.
My 2c
Michael