Interesting article in Decanter summarizing a French study (Jeff will have to track it down, I couldn't) on prices of vineyard land.
The prices of land in Burgundy and Champagne seem on a course to change the structure of ownership and raise near-insuperable barriers to the entry of new vignerons.
But what really struck me is the degree of meddling in the land markets. I knew that the government organization SAFER can step in to block the sale of vineyards to someone (actually I guess they have something like an option to buy the land even if you've negotiated a deal with someone else), but I had no idea that they actually did this in 38% of sales. I find that an astonishing number. It is supposed to be to favor young winemakers, but I can't imagine that village politics don't enter into things.
The prices of land in Burgundy and Champagne seem on a course to change the structure of ownership and raise near-insuperable barriers to the entry of new vignerons.
But what really struck me is the degree of meddling in the land markets. I knew that the government organization SAFER can step in to block the sale of vineyards to someone (actually I guess they have something like an option to buy the land even if you've negotiated a deal with someone else), but I had no idea that they actually did this in 38% of sales. I find that an astonishing number. It is supposed to be to favor young winemakers, but I can't imagine that village politics don't enter into things.