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Home International Customs Italy

Spain’s wine exports reach 22.8m hectoliters, beat France and Italy in 2014

byCustoms Today Report
04/03/2015
in Italy
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PARIS: Spanish wine exports reached 22.8 million hectoliters in 2014, a 22.3 percent rise on 2013.

Spain is a relative newcomer on the international circuit, compared to the French and Italians, yet it has beaten records to become the biggest wine exporter in the world.

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According to data published on February 23rd by Spanish wine market observatory (Obervatorio Español de los Mercados del Vino – OEM) Spanish wine exports reached 22.8 million hectoliters in 2014, a 22.3 percent rise on 2013.

But while the volume of sales has increased, profits have fallen 2.2 percent since 2013.

According to the latest data, France is now the biggest buyer of Spanish wines; guzzling 5.8 million hectoliters in 2014, a 40 percent rise on the previous year, followed by Germany, Portugal and Russia.

But if Spain is the biggest exporter of wine in the world, why have profits fallen? The answer may lie in the fact that the majority of wine exported from Spain, 55 percent, is sold in bulk, i.e. not bottled.

Wine must be exported each year to make space in the wineries for the new grape harvest,” Nairy Chaglasyan, Area Manager for J García Carrión, which exports wine to 155 countries worldwide and is the biggest wine producer in Europe and fourth in the world, told The Local.

Most of the cooperatives sell their wine in bulk – it’s much quicker than having to bottle it – and although there isn’t much profit at least the costs are covered.”

Spain, home to the biggest vineyards in the world, has always sold in bulk to its neighbours but profits are falling – the latest figures reveal that in 2014 the average price was 40 cents per litre, compared to 60 cents the year before.

It is often more economic for France to export wine in bulk from Spain and then label it, rather than growing the grapes and making the wine themselves.

Tags: wine

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