Photo from Palazzo Chigi Youtube |
25 years later, fast-forward to a new world. Italian wines are growing and are indeed respected worldwide. Matteo Renzi, one of a breed of young, entrepreneurial global politicians, elicited thundering applause from a packed room at Vinitaly when he remarked at a session that "Our wine is better than French wine." Italy also produced more wine in 2015 than France or Spain. And in dealing with the quantities of wine available to a thirsty world, Italy is looking again (to China, not Japan, this time) to help assuage a potential glut of wine.
Photo montage from Civilta del Bere April 1991 and Palazzo Chigi Youtube |
Italian wine perceptions will change when people of other cultures ( and more women) are better integrated in the process of changing the story and ultimately the direction of Italian wine. It isn’t good enough to be just “better than French wine.” One must be able to navigate the new global wine economy. Having a New Yorker and an Asian-American (and a woman) at the helm of Vinitaly’s International outreach is a welcome change from the traditional white-male dominated model. Say what you want, this is a huge step forward.
Photo from Vinitaly 2016: Donne del Vino |
I stated my case a year ago, and have moved forward. If I was heard (and I was, even if some folks didn’t like what they read) then let's give thanks for the improvements and move towards the future. The past is dust. The future is the stuff of dreams.
Photo from Palazzo Chigi Youtube |
So, now where do we go in the next 25-50 years? Ettore Nicoletto of the Santa Margherita group thinks Veronafiere and Vinitaly need to reach towards a more international event and in addition to the exhibition, a symposium that addresses the greatest issues of the wine industry in Italy.This is my takeaway from Vinitaly 2016 - let's hope Vinitaly leadership take Ettore's calm entreaty under advisement.
This past Vinitaly we saw Prime Minister Renzi showing his support for new platforms and new export markets (Alibaba and China) and this is great news. Being based in America, I see a home-grown generation coming up who are heading deep into wine country and who are starting to have the earning power, the influence and the sheer volume of numbers (of population) to drive Italian wine business in America even higher.
Photo from Palazzo Chigi Youtube |
But I am very interested in the next 25 years. I’ve seen a lot of change in the past 40. And change is accelerating. Italians are very good with the transformation process – they are often agents of change. So let’s give the organizers and leadership of Veronafiere an “Attaboy” for the modifications they did put in place and let’s hope along with infrastructural progress in and around Veronafiere (and Verona) the nagging issues will become a thing of the past. And let’s really look at this claim that Renzi makes, this "Our wine is better than French wine" claim, and take that message even deeper into the heartlands of China and America and anywhere else where that message will be heard. Let's make Italian wine "better than Italian wine is today." And let’s hope especially that message will be embraced in Italy, in which Italian winemakers and wine drinkers (and leaders) will buy in to this, heart and soul.
I know from this little spot in flyover country, we’ll be doing our darnedest to keep the Italian wine flag waving.
written by Alfonso Cevola limited rights reserved On the Wine Trail in Italy
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