China
Wine Tariff Pushes Australia’s Grape Growers into Crisis
Two
years later, they’re suffering from a glut of red wine and plummeting grape
prices with no overseas market big enough to fill the gap.
For years, China’s thirst
for Australian wine seemed insatiable. Chinese drinkers were so passionate
about big-bodied red wines from Australia that many vineyards replaced white
grapes with darker varieties. Wineries even reverted to using corks — instead
of convenient screw tops — because Chinese consumers liked the traditional
plug.
But then everything unraveled.
In April 2020, Australia’s
prime minister at the time, Scott Morrison, called for an
independent investigation into the origin of Covid-19.
Beijing was furious, denouncing “political
games” meant to assign blame for the pandemic. In response,
China unleashed its overwhelming economic might.
It imposed a punitive tariff
on Australian wine, and the country’s biggest overseas market vanished almost
immediately. Sales to China plummeted 97 percent that
first year. Storage tanks overflowed with unsold vintages of shiraz and
cabernet sauvignon, pressuring red grape prices.
Australia’s grape growers
are still suffering. This year, there is even less demand for red wine. Farmers
are facing a choice between selling grapes at a huge loss or keeping costs to a
minimum and not harvesting. Grape growers like Mauro Travaglione
are even questioning the future of their family business.
On his 130-acre farm in
Australia’s Riverland region outside Adelaide, Mr. Travaglione
has not produced any wholesale red wine since the tariff came into effect. Last
year, he sold his red grapes to other wineries and felt lucky to do so, even
though he barely covered his costs.
“Every day is a struggle,”
said Mr. Travaglione, whose family has lived in Waikerie, a rural town in the state of South Australia,
since his parents bought a small fruit farm there in 1966. “You have to
seriously think: Is it worth continuing on?”
When the Chinese market was
emerging, Beijing dangled entry as a carrot. Now that its economy is entrenched
as the world’s second largest, the threat of losing access to China’s 1.4 billion
consumers is a stick that few countries or industries can afford to provoke.
China has applied political
pressure on Taiwan by blocking imports of
the island’s pineapples, apples and fish. When Lithuania cozied up to Taiwan,
China imposed an unofficial trade
blockade on the Baltic nation.
In recent months, China has
embraced a softer approach to
diplomacy, fueling optimism that trade relations with
Australia may improve. In November, China’s top leader, Xi
Jinping, and Australia’s prime minister, Anthony Albanese, met at a gathering
of the Group of 20. A month later, Foreign Minister Penny Wong
became Australia’s first top diplomat to visit China in
four years. The two sides agreed to start
a dialogue on trade.
But there will be a lot of
acrimony to unwind. Shortly after Australia called for a Covid inquiry, China’s
Ministry of Commerce opened
an investigation into whether Australia was dumping wine
onto the market at artificially low prices. In March 2021, China imposed a
five-year tariff of up to 218 percent for Australian wine sold in quantities of
less than two liters.
The punitive measures didn’t
end there. The tariffs excluded red wine shipped in large pouches and bottled
in China, but Australian farmers said their shipments sat in Chinese ports for
months, unable to clear customs. China also blocked other Australian imports,
such as coal, barley, cotton and lobsters.
China went from being the
biggest buyer of Australian wine, accounting for 40 percent of exports, to
23rd, below countries like Sweden and the Philippines. It was devastating for
an industry that had reoriented its priorities after the two countries struck a
free-trade agreement in 2015.
Since roughly 95 percent of
Australian wine bought in China was red, Riverland farmers had added 1,600
acres of cabernet sauvignon, shiraz and merlot vines in the last decade, even
as the total acreage devoted to grape growing shrank, according to Wine
Australia.
“We were seduced by China,”
said Tim Whetstone, a member of South Australia’s House of Assembly
representing the Riverland, the country’s biggest grape-producing region. He
estimated that half the region’s red grapes would not be harvested for sale
this year.
“We put all our eggs in the
China basket, and it has come back to bite us,” Mr. Whetstone said.
Nikki Palun
was one of the Australian winemakers who charged into China. Fluent in
Mandarin, she started shipping bottles of wine to China in 2014, reaching a
height of more than two million a year — roughly 90 percent of her business.
When the tariffs hit, her business disappeared.
She tried products
unaffected by the tariffs. At first, she made spirits like vodka and brandy.
She even dabbled with sparkling grapefruit juice, but they failed to catch on.
The situation was further complicated because Australia was in a Covid
lockdown, making it difficult to drum up new business at home.
Ms. Palun
eventually opened a tasting room in Melbourne and focused on selling in
Australia. Now, most of her sales are domestic. She said she had been looking
at other overseas markets, “but nothing can replace China in terms of volume.”
Despite all that has
happened, Ms. Palun said the problem was not China
but a lack of skillful diplomacy by Australia’s
previous government. “We publicly humiliated China, and to me you just don’t do
that,” she said.
The pain continues to deepen
in Australia. Accolade Wines, a conglomerate, told its cooperative of Riverland
farmers that producing more red wine this year would only depress red grapes
again next year.
Instead of buying more red
grapes as part of a multiyear contract, Accolade said, it wanted to ease the
glut and would pay
farmers to “mothball” vineyards, or put vines in a dormant
state and not produce fruit for sale this year. Accolade also offered to pay
farmers to switch red grape vines back to white. Melanie Kargas,
a commercial manager for CCW Co-operative, a collective of about 500 Riverland
grape growers, said she had never heard of such offers before.
“They’re not profitable
options, but they’re sort of tread water options,” said Will Swinstead, a cooperative member who owns a family farm in
Overland Corner, in the Riverland.
Mr. Swinstead
chose to not harvest his red grapes. He said it was disappointing because he
had invested heavily to plant shiraz vines in the last five years to meet the
demands of the Chinese market. He is better off than other farmers in the area,
however, because he has another business growing watermelons, he said.
Running a farm is never
easy, and it is prone to boom-or-bust cycles. But grape growing is in Mr. Travaglione’s blood. His parents, who came to Australia in
the 1950s, were born into winemaking families in Italy. He had long hoped that
his children would one day take over the family farm.
But now Mr. Travaglione, 55, is reconsidering whether this is a life he
would want for them. The tariff wasn’t the only challenge. An
usually heavy rainy season flooded the nearby Murray River, and that moisture
elevated the risk of crop disease. The cost of fertilizer, shipping containers
and other business expenses is also higher.
When his son expressed an
interest in winemaking, Mr. Travaglione encouraged
him to explore other careers. His son will study mechanical engineering at a
university next year.
“It was heartbreaking,”
Mr. Travaglione said. “It’s hard to encourage the
younger generation to come into the industry.”
Recently, he learned that
his neighbor, a third-generation grape grower, was
calling it quits and listed his property for sale. Even exiting the industry is
tough, Mr. Travaglione said, because many vineyards
are for sale but there are no buyers.
“If this continues for
another two or three years, a lot of growers will be pulling out and just
walking away,” he said. “It’s just not viable.”