I have a FrenchAustralian neighbour whom I bumped into after a recent
trip he made to his home country.
I cant believe it! he said. I go over there and
everybody is drinking Australian wine!
According to Jonathan Scott, general manager of the Australian Wine Export
Council (AWEC), my neighbours claim is exaggerated: Mr Scott estimates
at between 5 and 10 percent the percentage of non-French wine drunk in
France. However, even in this most difficult of continental EU markets
and in the rest of the non-English speaking EU Australian
wine is beginning to have a presence.
Theyre important markets and we are winning a market share,
Mr Scott said.
On the back of significant success in the UK and Ireland where
Australian wine now has a 20 percent share of the market Australian
wine exports to the EU have, according to ABARE statistics, increased
almost five-fold since 1994 (when the AustraliaEuropean Commission
Trade in Wine Agreement
was signed).
Europe is now a $1 billion market for Australian wine (with the UK alone
at $820 million [2001]); approximately 50 percent of our entire wine export
market. However, on the continent, Australias market share is yet
to really take off. As the UK and Irish markets embrace an expanding range
of Australian varietals and regions, the Australian wine push on the continent
remains at awareness level.
A lot of these countries are unaware we make wine, Mr Scott
said. Most consumers see wine as having a home and were at
the stage of working with trade, doing point-of-sale stuff, tastings .
. .
He said that after success in the UK and Ireland, Australian wine obviously
faces significant challenges in the rest of the EU. With English the preferred
business language in much of Europe, the challenge in countries outside
the more entrenched markets (such as Italy, France and Spain) has more
to do with changing long-term habits than with breaking down language
barriers.
Markets such as Denmark, Sweden, the Netherlands and Belgium have for
a long time been biased towards European wines. New world wines
including Australian have made in-roads into these markets in the
past 5 to 10 years, but old world wines still dominate consumption.
Its a slower road and the fact that theyre non-English
speaking just adds to the challenge. But you dont resign from the
challenge, Mr Scott said.
Germany, Australias biggest continental EU market, now imports
more wine than it produces. Lawrie Stanford, information and analysis
manager with the Australian Wine and Brandy Corporation (AWBC), said Germany
is a strong European prospect, but its proving a little more difficult
than we may have anticipated a couple of years ago.
David Woods, international trading director with BRL Hardy, said Germany
is a competitive market in which to establish an Australian beach head.
He added that problems in the German economy are also proving problematic.
Still, its a market Australia must pursue.
If Australia was selling as much into Germany on a per capita basis
as it is to the Netherlands wed be struggling to keep up with it.,
he said, adding that 2002 figures show the Netherlands is a $37 million
market for Australia.
According to Mr Scott, Australian wines strong branding has placed
(and will continue to place) the industry in good stead in the EU. Mr
Scott said effective branding had allowed Australia to develop a franchise
of consumers who recognise Australian wines consistency and
reliability. It seems that reliance on our appellations in the continental
market is something for further down the track, if at all.
Some old world European producers, rather than being strong on
brand, are very strong on appellation, and the appellation in many cases
has become a substitute brand. The problem that a consumer will often
find is that the appellation has a plethora of wines at different price
points.
Mr Scott said when compared against Australian brands European wine appellations
can prove confusing and counterproductive to the task of developing consumer
confidence and effectively marketing products. Mr Stanford said the Australian
wine industry is aware that marketing is the key issue and that every
effort was being made to establish best position.
Up until now weve been constrained in terms of supply,
Mr Stanford said. However, that issue has obviously faded due to
the current over supply. Were now in a position where we can focus
on marketing. Its a shift in emphasis and we know that the job is
there and weve worked hard at thinking about it through things like
The Marketing Decade (a strategy document available
at www.awbc.com.au)
My FrenchAustralian neighbour is under 30. So were the French friends
with whom he was drinking on his recent trip to the continent. Mr Scott
said AWEC has since the inception of its marketing campaigns been aware
of the need to market Australian wine to an emerging generation.
In the UK weve been sponsoring the University Wine Challenge
which takes knowledge of wine in a fun way to universities around the
country. In other markets weve worked with things like backpackers
fares and alike.
Mr Scott added that especially in Europe tackling the youth demographic
was essential and not just because young drinkers had ahead of
them a long stretch of purchasing years. In countries with well developed
wine cultures its obviously a difficult task to shift older drinkers
from their standard fare. But Australian wine can have an impact on younger
consumers due to an age old phenomenon: youth rebellion.
There is a lot of evidence to show that in a country like France,
where wine consumption has been such a strong fabric of life, younger
consumers are perhaps saying, Well, Ill drink something different
to what my parents drank . . .
In the UK, Australian wine is clearly more than the latest fad for young
pop stars before they move onto vintages from other global hot spots.
But is this a possibility in the rest of the EU?
I dont think so, said Mr Scott. However, theres
no room for complacency by anyone in the wine industry. There is no God-given
right, no natural progression that says a young consumer will move from
Bacardi and Coke and RTDs to wine when they turn 25 or 30.
Mr Stanford said return customers are already a reality in Europe and
theyve been quickly made aware of our wines consistency and
reliability. He said Australias developing clean and green
image will also play an important part in EU success.
The environment is a big issue, he said. The industry
is gearing up to understand its environmental credentials a lot better
and to put them in place. There was a two-day conference in December which
was the second of the industrys environmental conferences . . .
[thats] a sign that its attending to those sorts of issues,
and in Europe clean and green is very important.
In a further push to strengthen EU wine exports, Australia is currently
contesting aspects of EU wine labelling legislation, claiming it presents
a barrier to trade. The aforementioned 1994 bilateral agreement was signed
with a clause that stipulated the phase out in 10 years of the use of
certain geographical indications. Australia is currently working to water
down some of the EU wine labelling regulations that impose strict conditions
on the use of common descriptive words used on wine labels.
In the continued push to raise awareness of Australian wine in the EU,
AWEC has undergone some significant recent changes. Setting up offices
throughout Europe has been spurned in favour of a continental HQ in the
Netherlands (one of Australias key EU markets) to complement the
UK base.
We have an office in Germany and it reports to the continental
European office in the Netherlands, said Mr Scott. We run
activity through the Scandinavian markets, but we no longer have full-time
staff operating from Scandinavian countries. Were going to run that
activity and activities in other EU countries from the Netherlands.
Mr Scott said the approach represents a substantial change to the way
AWEC does business. And according to Mr Woods at BRL Hardy its a
positive move.
Its acknowledgment of the fact that the UK is a huge market
that needs a dedicated team and that what has made us successful in the
UK may not be the sort of thing that make us successful in mainland Europe.
According to the AWBC, increased EU production looms as a significant
issue for Australian exporters. Mr Stanford said there were signs EU countries
were increasing their premium wine production after a considerable period
of reduced production. However, Mr Scott remained unconvinced that EU
production was rising and he added the wine he sees being produced represents
more of the same.
Theres certainly a stated aim that EU production has to lift
its quality, but were not seeing drops in yields that are likely
to lead to higher quality.
So maybe my French neighbours friends and hopefully their
friends throughout the continent will more than ever seek out Australian
wine . . .