29 April 2025
Looking at the crisis in the French wineries industry. A representative case is that of a now-elderly gentleman - we shall call him Luc Raisinsec - who, some 20 or 30 years ago, combined his vineyard with someone else's, making a splendid vineyard of some 60 hectares of contiguous cultivated vine.
Since that time the family has been obliged to halve the land under cultivation.
The family receives aid to remove vines now from the local municipality or they sell the land to green washing companies who plant trees and sell for greenhouse gas quotas.
Now they are looking to sell another 10 hectaires.
What is going on here? And what efforts are being made to save one of France's finest industries? What can viticulteurs expect for their futures and the futures of their children.
The French Wine Crisis: Causes, Impacts, and Responses
1. Introduction
French wineries face an unprecedented crisis, notably in regions like southwest France, exemplified by forced liquidations such as that experienced by a 60-hectare estate. This article explores economic, environmental, regulatory, and generational factors driving this industry turmoil.
2. Economic Pressures and Market Shifts
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French wine consumption nearly halved from 46 million hectolitres (1970s) to 24 million (2023).
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Structural surplus of 4–5 million hectolitres, especially in Bordeaux and southwest France.
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Decline in global demand, notably from China, has severely impacted exports.
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Collapse of bulk wine prices (from €800/barrel in early 2000s to €650–€700 today, far below production costs).
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Wine liquidations in Bordeaux resulted in sales as low as €0.05 per bottle, highlighting desperation.
3. Environmental Challenges
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Climate change causing severe droughts, heatwaves, and damaging spring frosts.
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Increased disease pressures (e.g., downy mildew), reducing yields and increasing costs.
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Climate adaptation expensive and limited by strict AOC regulations.
4. Regulatory and EU Constraints
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EU policies like planting rights and crisis distillation partially manage surpluses but impose bureaucratic delays.
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Strict French appellation (AOC) regulations restrict vineyard flexibility and adaptation.
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High labour and environmental compliance costs further strain growers.
5. Generational and Social Changes
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Aging vineyard owners without successors leading to farm abandonment.
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Younger generations less interested in viticulture due to poor financial outlook and lifestyle demands.
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Changing consumer preferences: younger people drinking less wine, favouring beer and non-alcoholic beverages.
6. Regional Impacts: Focus on Southwest France
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Bordeaux experiencing severe oversupply: 1,371 growers struggling, covering 35,000 hectares.
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Forced uprooting schemes (around 10,000 hectares) to balance market supply.
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Lesser-known southwestern appellations like Bergerac, Gaillac, and Cahors also face financial distress and surplus stocks.
7. Overproduction and the Red Wine Glut
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Excessive wine production creating massive inventories of unsold red wine.
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Dramatic drop in red wine demand domestically and internationally.
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Generic wines suffer most; distinct, quality-driven products remain more resilient.
8. Wave of Closures and Liquidations
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Sharp increase in insolvencies: Bordeaux alone saw 265 vineyard insolvencies in 2024 (up 58% year-on-year).
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Auctioning of wines at negligible prices becoming increasingly common.
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Cooperative cellars and wine négociants also under severe financial pressure.
9. Government and Industry Responses
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Crisis distillation fund (€170 million EU/French initiative) converting surplus wine to ethanol.
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Vine uprooting compensation scheme implemented to permanently reduce vineyard area.
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Emergency financial aid: debt relief, tax deferments, bridging loans to struggling producers.
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Increased industry promotion, market diversification, and tourism initiatives.
10. Paths to Transformation and Recovery
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Shift towards premiumisation: producing less wine of higher quality (organic, niche markets).
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Diversification into wine-adjacent products (non-alcoholic wines, grape juice, craft beverages).
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Growing importance of wine tourism, direct sales, and consumer engagement.
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Adoption of climate-resistant grape varieties and innovative vineyard management techniques.
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Potential market stabilisation by 2025–26 through ongoing interventions and adaptive strategies.
11. Conclusion
French wineries, particularly in the southwest, face a critical transformation. Short-term measures are providing emergency relief, while long-term strategies aim at creating a leaner, more resilient industry. Despite severe challenges, optimism persists around building a smaller, sustainable, and adaptive wine sector fit for future demands.
References & Sources:
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Laurence Girard, Le Monde (2023, 2024)
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Jacques Dupont, Le Point (2024)
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BFMTV / Sud Ouest (2024)
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Alexandre Abellan, Vitisphere (2025)
Listen to a lively discussion
Aimed at raising awareness of the crisis and human suffering facing viticulteurs, especially in South West France:
Detailed report
The Crisis Facing French Wineries: Causes, Impacts and Responses
1. Introduction
French wine producers are confronting a deep crisis marked by tumbling demand, oversupply, and mounting financial distress. In late 2023 and 2024, the situation became dire enough that even large vineyards faced forced liquidations, exemplified by a 60-hectare estate in the southwest that went under after failing to sell its wine. This report examines the multifaceted causes behind the French winery crisis – from economic and environmental pressures to regulatory and generational challenges – and reviews the regional impacts (notably in southwestern France), the spate of closures, industry and government responses, and prospects for transformation. The analysis draws on recent statistics, expert commentary, and credible French and international sources.
2. Economic Pressures and Market Shifts
Declining Consumption in France: French people are drinking significantly less wine than they used to. Annual domestic wine consumption has nearly halved since the 1970s, dropping from about 46 million hectolitres to 24 million by 2023 (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français). This reflects a cultural shift – daily wine with meals is no longer the norm, especially among younger generations. As Jérôme Despey of the National Federation of Agricultural Holders observed, France now has a structural surplus of wine “between 4 and 5 million hectolitres,” concentrated in the big red-wine regions like Bordeaux, Languedoc and the Rhône (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français). Simply put, locals aren’t drinking enough to absorb what is produced. Demand for red wine in particular has slumped, as consumers pivot to other beverages or styles (rosé, craft beer, etc.). A Bordeaux industry report notes that “the decline in wine consumption, notably reds, is combining with an unencouraging international situation” (Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?) – a double hit to sales.

Weak Export Markets and Global Competition: French wineries also face headwinds abroad. Traditional export markets are sluggish: for instance, China – once a booming destination for Bordeaux – has “contracted” severely in demand (Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?) amid economic slowdowns and shifting tastes. Globally, competition from other wine-producing countries is intense. New World producers (Australia, Chile, USA, etc.) and European neighbours (Spain, Italy) offer quality wines often at lower prices, squeezing French wines in supermarkets and import markets. In France itself, inexpensive imported wine (such as Spanish bulk wine) has put downward pressure on prices for domestic producers. All these factors mean it’s harder for French vintners to find profitable outlets for their bottles, even as global wine consumption stagnates.
Price Pressures and Unsold Stock: With supply outpacing demand, prices for bulk wine have collapsed in certain segments. In Bordeaux’s volume market, a barrel (900 litres) of generic red wine that fetched €800 in the early 2000s (during the last downturn) might only fetch around €650–€700 today – well below the roughly €1,200 cost of production – and even then buyers are scarce (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes). Some growers simply cannot sell their stock at any viable price. One veteran vintner, Didier Cousiney, notes that 20 years ago even cheap wine could find a buyer, whereas now “no transaction is happening” at prevailing prices (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes). In extreme cases of liquidation, wine has sold for absurdly low prices – for example, at one bankrupt Bordeaux estate, hundreds of hectolitres were auctioned off at €7 per hectolitre (about €0.05 per bottle) (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). This collapse in prices and revenue makes it nearly impossible for many wineries to cover costs, pay workers or service debts. It creates a vicious cycle: unsold inventories pile up, causing further price declines in an oversupplied market.
Global Economic Factors: Broader economic trends compound these pressures. High inflation and tighter consumer budgets in key markets mean people are cutting back on wine spending or opting for cheaper alternatives. The COVID-19 pandemic also disrupted sales – restaurants and bars (major wine channels) were closed for periods, leaving a backlog of unsold wine that many producers are still grappling with. Although sales rebounded after lockdowns, the recovery wasn’t enough to offset the secular decline in consumption. Additionally, rising production costs (energy, glass bottles, transport, etc.) have squeezed margins just as selling prices fell. For heavily indebted estates or those that invested in expansion hoping for export growth, the downturn has become a financial crunch.
3. Environmental Challenges (Climate, Drought, Disease)
The crisis is exacerbated by environmental factors that have made winegrowing more challenging and unpredictable. Climate change has introduced greater variability and extremes in weather, impacting yields and quality:
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Droughts and Heatwaves: France’s wine regions have suffered repeated summer heatwaves and drought conditions in recent years. In parts of the southwest, water stress has stunted vines and reduced grape output. Many AOC-regulated vineyards traditionally cannot irrigate freely due to rules, leaving them at the mercy of rainfall. Prolonged drought in 2022, for instance, cut yields in some appellations and forced wineries to invest in emergency irrigation or risk losing their crop. Hotter growing seasons also lead to grapes with higher sugar (and alcohol) levels, potentially altering the styles of wine and making them less aligned with consumer preferences for fresher, lower-alcohol wines.
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Spring Frosts and Hail: Sudden cold snaps have caused severe damage. A notorious April 2021 frost hit vineyards from Bordeaux to Burgundy, destroying buds and devastating the year’s harvest for many growers. Such once-in-decades events are becoming more frequent, posing a financial threat – a bad frost year can wipe out a small winery’s income and push it to insolvency. Likewise, hailstorms (common in Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Champagne) can shred vines in minutes, requiring costly replanting. These acute disasters add risk for wineries already on the edge.
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Vine Diseases and Pests: Warmer, humid conditions can increase disease pressures like mildew (mildiou). In 2023, for example, Bordeaux experienced heavy early-summer rains which led to downy mildew outbreaks, significantly reducing yields in affected vineyards. Combating such diseases raises costs (more treatments, labour) and if not successful, results in less wine to sell. Additionally, chronic vine illnesses (like trunk diseases such as Esca) are slowly killing off vines and forcing replanting. New pests migrating due to climate shifts, such as the golden flavescence dorée vine disease spread by leafhoppers, have appeared in southwestern France, leading to quarantines and vine removal in some areas. All these environmental stresses mean many growers face lower output or higher costs – often both – which erodes their already thin profitability.
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Adaptation Challenges: Adjusting to climate change requires investment and flexibility. Some French appellations (including Bordeaux) have only recently approved new heat-tolerant grape varieties or are considering irrigation rule changes. But adapting vineyards (replanting with resilient grape clones, installing water reservoirs, anti-frost measures like heaters or wind machines) is expensive – not all small family wineries can afford it. Those that cannot adapt may see their vineyard viability decline over time, adding a slow-burn aspect to the crisis.
In summary, environmental issues are adding another layer of pressure on French wineries. While not the primary cause of the current economic crisis (indeed, smaller harvests can temporarily ease oversupply), climate-related losses and costs have weakened producers’ financial positions and made the business less attractive to the next generation.
4. Regulatory and EU Constraints
The wine sector is also shaped by regulatory and policy factors that can both help and hinder wineries during a crisis:
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European Union (EU) Policies: For decades, the EU maintained strict controls to prevent wine gluts – including a planting rights system (limiting new vineyard area) and subsidised vine pull-up schemes. These policies did curb overproduction in the past (notably in the 1980s and late 2000s, when growers were paid to grub up vines), but they also limited rapid adjustment. In the current crisis, EU rules around state aid and the Common Agricultural Policy have influenced France’s response. For example, French authorities had to seek approval from Brussels to deploy emergency funds for distilling surplus wine. By 2023, the EU did allow France (and other countries like Spain and Italy facing similar surpluses) to tap agricultural funds for a “crisis distillation” programme – effectively turning excess wine into industrial alcohol or biofuel to remove it from the market (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français). While this intervention was helpful, it came with bureaucratic delays and caps on funding.
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Taxation and Regulation of Alcohol: France traditionally has low excise taxes on wine (considering it part of its cultural heritage), but public health pushes (e.g. discouraging alcohol consumption) and advertising restrictions for alcohol (the Loi Évin law) mean the domestic market isn’t easily stimulated by promotion. Regulatory constraints also affect how wineries can diversify – for instance, distilling wine to spirits or making other products may require additional licenses and compliance with EU spirit regulations.
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Appellation Rules: French wine appellation (AOC/AOP) rules, while crucial for quality and branding, can act as a constraint in times of crisis. Strict rules on permitted grape varieties, yields, irrigation, and production methods give wineries little flexibility to pivot. If a certain style (say, heavy red Bordeaux) is struggling to find buyers, producers cannot easily change their vineyards to another product. Some Bordeaux vintners have chosen to declassify their wine to simpler categories (like Vin de France) to experiment with different grapes or wine styles, but then they lose the premium of the appellation name. There is ongoing debate about loosening some AOC rules to allow adaptation to climate and market trends (for example, Bordeaux’s recent approval of a few new grapes is a step in this direction). However, any rule change is slow and often controversial.
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Labor and Environmental Regulations: French labour laws, while protecting workers, raise costs for producers (minimum wage, social charges), which can be burdensome when profit margins vanish. Environmental regulations increasingly restrict certain vineyard practices (like chemical sprays) for good reason, but compliance can increase short-term costs. Additionally, converting land use (e.g. from vines to another crop or to install solar panels for extra income) may face administrative hurdles if the land is zoned for agriculture or if the vineyard is under appellation control. Some growers have complained that bureaucracy makes it hard to quickly exit or repurpose vineyards, effectively trapping them in an unprofitable business until bankruptcy forces a sale.
In essence, while EU and French policies have tools to manage wine surpluses, they also impose frameworks that can slow down how wineries adapt. The current crisis has prompted calls for more flexible regulations – such as easier vine removal and replanting rules, and greater support from the EU’s wine funds – to help the industry adjust to new realities.
5. Generational and Social Changes
Aging Growers and Succession Problems: The French wine sector faces a demographic challenge. Many vineyard owners are older, often second or third-generation vignerons nearing retirement with no willing heirs to take over. The lifestyle – hard physical work, uncertain income, and now crisis-level stress – is proving unattractive to younger generations, who have more career options today. The result is a wave of vineyard properties up for sale or simply being abandoned. According to the Chamber of Agriculture in Gironde (Bordeaux’s department), as of mid-2023 over 1,300 winegrowers (covering 35,000 hectares of vines) had declared themselves in economic difficulty (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes). A significant number of these are likely to exit the industry, and if their children or other young farmers don’t step in, those vineyards will cease production. In the past, a struggling vintner might sell their land to a neighbour or a new entrant, but today there are few takers, given the poor market outlook.
Youth Disinterest in Wine-Growing: Beyond family succession, attracting new young winegrowers is difficult. Agriculture in general has an image problem among French youth, and viticulture – despite its romantic sheen – is no exception. Young people see their parents work long hours in the vines for slim returns, amid market volatility and climate headaches. Many prefer urban jobs or less risky professions. Even students graduating from viticulture/oenology programs may opt for stable roles (like in wine commerce or consulting) rather than the uncertainty of running a farm. This generational turnover issue means the wine sector’s talent and labour pool is shrinking. It also means fewer innovative ideas and fewer adopters of new technologies that younger farmers might bring.
Changing Consumer Habits of the Young: On the consumer side, French youth are also less enamoured with wine as a drink. Surveys indicate that younger adults in France drink wine far less regularly than their parents or grandparents did – they are more likely to consume beer, cocktails, or non-alcoholic beverages. When they do drink wine, it’s often seen as an occasional indulgence, not a staple. This “dégringolade” (fall) in wine’s cultural importance among the young both reduces the domestic customer base and symbolically undercuts the product’s prestige. It is harder to motivate young family members to carry on a business when the product itself doesn’t hold the place it once did in society.
Social Strains: The crisis has taken an emotional toll on winegrowing families. There are reports of depression and burnout among vignerons facing mounting debts and the potential loss of their ancestral lands. Some small village communities in Bordeaux or the southwest risk hollowing out if wineries close en masse, as vineyards often support local jobs (pruners, cellar hands) and allied trades (cooperages, machinery suppliers). The human side of the crisis is illustrated by growers like Fabienne Krier in Gironde: “Today, I am discouraged… I dreamed of only doing vines, now I wonder if I will uproot the 5 hectares I have left,” she confides (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes). Such stories are increasingly common, reflecting a generation of winemakers questioning their future.
In summary, generational change is both a cause and a casualty of the winery crisis: fewer young people drinking wine or choosing viticulture as a career contributes to the downturn, and the harsh conditions of the downturn further drive away the next generation.
6. Regional Impacts: Focus on Southwest France
While wine regions across France feel the squeeze, southwest France – especially Bordeaux and its environs – is the epicentre of the crisis. Bordeaux is France’s largest AOC vineyard by area, traditionally renowned for its reds, and it now illustrates many of the challenges discussed:
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Bordeaux’s Overcapacity: Bordeaux expanded plantings in the 1990s and 2000s when global demand (particularly from China and the US) was growing. Many entrepreneurs bought land and planted vines, expecting rising sales. Now, with demand fallen, the region is left with too many vines and too much wine. By mid-2023, those 1,371 Bordeaux growers in distress (noted above) represented about 35,000 hectares of vines (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes) – roughly one-third of the entire Bordeaux vineyard area – concentrated in the Entre-deux-Mers, basic Bordeaux and Côtes de Bordeaux appellations, and parts of the Médoc. These are mostly the producers of mid-range and entry-level wines, not the famous classified growths. (Top châteaux selling fine wine to wealthy collectors remain relatively insulated; the crisis “does not concern the grands crus,” as noted in the Gironde Chamber report (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes).) The broad base of Bordeaux’s pyramid, however, is crumbling under oversupply.
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Forced Uprooting of Vines: Bordeaux has reached the point of tearing out vineyards to balance the market. In 2023, local authorities and industry bodies agreed on a vine pull scheme to remove roughly 9,500–10,000 hectares of vineyards, with compensation offered to growers who uproot their vines. The aim is to reduce the annual production by a few million hectolitres and thus prop up prices for the remaining producers. Winter 2023/24 saw the first phase of uprooting: images of rows of vines being bulldozed in the Gironde – a once unthinkable sight in the prestigious Bordeaux region – drove home the severity of the situation. “It’s a very, very difficult decision, but we have no choice,” said one Bordeaux vintner faced with grubbing up vines he planted decades ago. These drastic measures will push Bordeaux’s total vineyard area below 100,000 hectares for the first time in years, rolling back the expansion of the past decades. (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes) (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français)
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Other Southwest Areas: Beyond Bordeaux, other parts of southwest France (often grouped under the “Sud-Ouest” wine region) are also affected. For example, vintners in Bergerac, Gaillac, Madiran and Cahors (lesser-known AOCs adjacent to Bordeaux) have similarly seen sales drop and stocks build up, since they produce mostly rustic red wines that struggle to find buyers in the current market. These areas don’t have the brand recognition of Bordeaux and often compete on price, leaving them vulnerable to competition from foreign value wines. Some cooperative cellars in these districts have reported full tanks with nowhere to put the next harvest. The Landes and Gers (known for Armagnac brandy and Côtes de Gascogne wine) also face knock-on effects – if wine grapes aren’t profitable, farmers might rip them out for other crops, which can alter the whole agricultural landscape of the southwest.
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Social Fabric of the SW Vineyards: The southwest is traditionally wine country – generations of families working small plots. The crisis here is not just economic but cultural. Towns in Bordeaux’s hinterlands that thrived on wine are seeing unemployment and anxiety. There have been protests in Bordeaux city where hundreds of winegrowers drove tractors through the streets in early 2023, demanding emergency aid and chanting for the government to “save the Bordelais.” Regional pride has taken a hit as media headlines talk of a “Bordeaux wine bust” and pictures of unsold bottles being dumped for pennies circulate. The local newspaper Sud Ouest and others have run almost daily stories on vineyard foreclosures, suicides in farming communities, and the desperate search for solutions. This regional crisis has caught national attention because Bordeaux wine is an emblem of France – seeing it in such turmoil is alarming to many.
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Other Regions Comparison: It’s worth noting that not all French wine regions are equally affected. Areas like Champagne and Provence (famous for sparkling wine and rosé, respectively) have relatively strong demand and have avoided the glut – in fact Champagne faces the opposite issue of limited supply versus high demand. The Loire Valley and Burgundy also have held steadier, partly due to strong export markets and producing wine styles currently in vogue (crisp whites, lighter reds). Thus, the crisis has a geographical dimension: it is most acute in regions heavy on mass-produced reds that are out of favour. Unfortunately for the southwest, it falls squarely in that category, making it the focal point of France’s wine woes.
7. Overproduction and the Red Wine Glut
A core driver of the crisis is industry overproduction colliding with falling demand, especially for red wines:
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The “Wine Lake” Phenomenon: France finds itself with millions of litres of surplus wine that cannot be sold profitably. As noted, experts estimate 4–5 million hectolitres of excess wine are languishing in tanks (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français). Much of this is red wine from regions like Bordeaux and Languedoc. Over the past few years, successive good harvests (barring frost-affected 2021) combined with declining consumption have created a glut. Warehouse and cellar storage is filling up; some producers have had to rent additional storage or leave wine in bulk containers longer than ideal. This wine surplus depresses prices further – bulk buyers know producers are desperate to clear stock, so they negotiate rock-bottom prices (or simply wait, knowing that eventually distress sales will occur).
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Plunging Demand for Reds: The French consumer’s changing tastes directly feed this glut. Red wine consumption has dropped sharply, more so than white or rosé. Health concerns (reds are seen as heavier, with more alcohol and tannins), changing cuisine trends, and the appeal of chilled rosé or craft beer among younger crowds have all dented red wine’s popularity. In French supermarkets, sales of inexpensive red AOC wines have been falling, with some reports of double-digit percentage declines year-on-year. Meanwhile, rosé has gained market share (Provence rosé, for example, has been booming). This imbalance means that tanks of unsold red continue to grow. The issue isn’t limited to France – other European countries have also seen red wine demand slip – but France’s producers have been hit hard because red wine forms such a large portion of its output (historically over half of all wine made in France has been red).
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Quality vs Quantity Dilemma: In times of oversupply, there is often too much ordinary wine and not enough demand for it. Wines that have a unique quality story or strong brand can still sell – e.g. a famous château or an organic/natural wine with a niche following. But a generic “Bordeaux Supérieur 2019” of average quality now struggles to find a market. Unfortunately, a lot of vineyard land (especially those expanses planted in the good times) was devoted to producing high volumes of reasonably drinkable, if unremarkable, wine. That model is now broken. The crisis is forcing a reckoning: producers either must cut volume or improve distinctiveness (quality, origin, organic certification, etc.) to stand out. In Bordeaux, yields have been voluntarily reduced by some, and unsold wine from 2022 and 2023 is being distilled rather than bottled, acknowledging that it simply can’t be marketed. Until production comes down to match the new lower demand, the oversupply will persist.
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Market Saturation and Alternatives: On the global stage, France also faces a saturated market for red wines. New World producers have flooded markets like the UK and US with competitively priced reds (think Australian Shiraz, Chilean Cabernet, etc.). In Asia, consumer preference is shifting – where once a status-conscious middle class only wanted Bordeaux, now they are exploring wines from Italy, South America, or even local Chinese wineries. Additionally, no-alcohol and low-alcohol wines, while still a small segment, are growing as health-conscious consumers seek alternatives – this trend undercuts traditional wine consumption. All these dynamics contribute to too much red wine chasing too few drinkers. French winemakers find themselves in the painful position of having to destroy or discard perfectly good wine because there is no market for it.
In essence, the red wine glut is a symptom of a market that has dramatically changed. The French wine industry, especially in regions built on red wine volume, is now forced to downsize and reorient to escape this trap of overproduction.
8. Wave of Closures and Liquidations
The combined effect of the above factors has been a wave of winery closures, bankruptcies, and forced sales rarely seen in modern French history. What was once unthinkable – venerable vineyards being liquidated – is now happening with disturbing regularity, particularly in the Bordeaux area:
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Sudden Liquidations: In late 2023, news broke of several sizeable estates in Bordeaux going into liquidation judiciaire (court-ordered liquidation). For example, Château Grand Housteau in the Gironde (about 30 hectares of vines) was one such case. After the owners fell into financial trouble, the estate’s equipment and wine stocks were auctioned off in autumn 2023 at fire-sale prices, including bottles for €0.05 each as mentioned earlier (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). Industry observers were shocked at the sight of Bordeaux wine effectively being sold for pennies, with one describing the buyers’ opportunism as behaving like “vultures” (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). The vice-president of the Bordeaux wine council (CIVB), Bernard Farges, called the situation “shameful” and “morally unbearable” (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château), warning that it should not become a precedent. Yet, by early 2024, more cases were emerging.
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Rising Bankruptcy Filings: The legal tribunals in Bordeaux and Libourne have been inundated with winery bankruptcy cases. In Gironde, 265 winery insolvency proceedings were opened in 2024, a 58% jump compared to 2023 (which itself was up 61% from 2022) (Les chiffres inédits de la crise du vin de Bordeaux). These proceedings include everything from safeguard measures and restructurings to outright liquidations. Of those 265 cases, dozens ended in full liquidation, meaning the business ceased and assets were sold. This marks a dramatic acceleration – previously, only a handful of Bordeaux wineries might fail in a given year. The fact that hundreds of vineyards are now “défaillants” (in default) is indicative of an entire sector under existential threat. As one headline put it, Bordeaux is facing the risk of a “banqueroute générale” – a general bankruptcy of the wine sector (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château).
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Examples of Affected Estates: Besides Grand Housteau, other medium-sized family domains and châteaux (some 50–60 hectares in size, hence the reference in the question) have been impacted in the southwest. For privacy and legal reasons, names are not always publicised, but regional reports talk of multi-generation estates that failed to find a buyer or successor and eventually had to be sold off by the courts. These include properties in lesser-known appellations like Castillon Côtes-de-Bordeaux and Premières Côtes, as well as some in the Médoc. A pattern seen in a few cases was purchase by outside investors during better times, followed by neglect or mismanagement when the market turned, leading to abandonment of the vines (as happened with Grand Housteau, which was bought by foreign investors but then left fallow before its liquidation (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château)). Abandoned vineyards have sadly become a more common sight – rows of untended, wild-growing vines as the owner can no longer afford to maintain them, awaiting a possible uprooting or sale.
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Impact on Cooperatives and Negociants: It’s not just individual domaines – some wine cooperatives (where growers pool their grapes to make joint wines) are also struggling, and at least one in the Bordeaux area has closed, leaving its member growers with nowhere to vinify their grapes. Wine négociants (merchants) in Bordeaux, who traditionally buy wine from small châteaux to sell under their own labels, are also in trouble as many have “three vintages on their hands” unsold (Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?). A few smaller negociant firms have gone bust, unable to pay the wineries for previous purchases. This adds further strain back on the producers.
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A Once Exceptional Situation Becoming Common: Industry leaders are sounding the alarm that these closures are not isolated incidents but part of a worrying trend. “It’s a subject that was once exceptional which is going to repeat itself,” lamented Bernard Farges, as more auction notices appear for winery assets (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). The Confédération Paysanne (a farmers’ union) warned that distress sales at rock-bottom prices risk precipitating a “general collapse” if they set the market price too low and drag everyone down (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). The union has urged authorities to step in and prevent wholesale liquidation of the sector. In short, what was once rare – a venerable French vineyard going bankrupt – is now alarmingly routine in the southwest. Each liquidation is not just an economic loss but often a personal tragedy for the family involved and a dent in the region’s wine heritage.
9. Government and Industry Responses
Facing this unprecedented crisis, French authorities and wine industry bodies have launched a series of responses to try to alleviate the pain and set the stage for recovery. Key measures and proposals include:
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Crisis Distillation Fund: In 2023, the French government, in conjunction with EU support, approved a major emergency distillation program. Over €170 million (with funding from both Paris and Brussels) was allocated to buy up surplus wine, particularly in Bordeaux and Languedoc, and distil it into industrial alcohol or bioethanol (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français). The idea is to soak up the excess supply, thereby reducing the glut and preventing prices from falling further. Thousands of vintners applied to this scheme, sending off tanker trucks of unsold wine to distilleries. The alcohol produced will be used for products like hand sanitiser, perfume, or fuel additive – a grim fate for fine grapes, but a necessary one to remove inventory. This recalls EU “wine lake” interventions of the past, but on a targeted scale. By late 2023, the program aimed to eliminate several million hectolitres of surplus (reports mention roughly 3 million hl from France). Officials cautioned this is a one-time remedy and not a sustainable solution, but it provides short-term relief and cash flow to struggling producers (the government pays them per alcohol degree per hectolitre of wine distilled).
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Vine Uprooting Compensation: As discussed in the regional section, a voluntary vine pull-up scheme has been implemented, especially in Bordeaux. The government and regional authorities set aside funds to compensate growers around €6,000–€10,000 per hectare uprooted (figures varied as negotiations went on). The aim is to permanently reduce vineyard surface in oversupplied areas. Although tearing out vines is painful, the incentive was oversubscribed – an indication that many growers are ready to exit if given even a modest golden handshake. This measure should, in theory, help restore balance between supply and demand in the medium term by curbing production. It’s essentially paying certain vintners to retire vineyards and possibly transition to other crops or land uses. By early 2024, the first thousands of hectares were being uprooted under this program (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes).
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Financial Aid and Debt Relief: The French government also announced tax relief and social security contribution deferments for winegrowers in crisis. For example, some farmers’ loan payments have been rescheduled, and emergency funds have been made available to those on the brink of bankruptcy to cover immediate bills. In Bordeaux, the regional council and banks worked on a plan to offer bridging loans or debt moratoria to cellars that can demonstrate a viable restructuring plan. While these financial band-aids cannot fix the market, they are intended to prevent a domino effect of bankruptcies. There is also discussion of using EU rural development funds to help winegrowers diversify their income (such as subsidies to plant different crops or develop agritourism).
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Market Promotion Efforts: Wine industry bodies (like the CIVB in Bordeaux and national institutions like CNIV) have ramped up marketing campaigns to stimulate demand. They are exploring new export markets in Asia, Africa, and North America, and trying to re-engage French consumers, especially younger adults. For instance, campaigns highlighting moderate wine consumption as part of a French lifestyle, or promoting the quality and food-pairing virtues of Bordeaux wines, have been launched. The industry is also pushing wine tourism (oenotourism) – encouraging people to visit vineyards, which can boost direct sales at estates and foster a personal connection with consumers.
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Structural Reforms: Some structural changes are being debated at high levels. The French agriculture ministry set up a task force in late 2022 (a “cellule de crise”) which in 2023 evolved into an operational committee to monitor the wine sector (Les chiffres inédits de la crise du vin de Bordeaux). This group has been studying longer-term reforms such as: relaxing certain AOC rules to allow innovation, encouraging consolidation of small farms into cooperatives for economies of scale, and retraining programs for those leaving viticulture. At the EU level, France has lobbied for more flexibility in use of Common Market Organisation funds so that, for example, money earmarked for vineyard modernization can be re-purposed to crisis support when needed.
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Industry Solidarity and Initiatives: Within the wine community, there’s a recognition that collective action is needed. Negotiations between growers and négociants in Bordeaux have aimed to limit the volume produced (through yield caps) until the surplus is cleared. Some cooperatives have voluntarily distilled part of their members’ production pre-emptively. There are also calls to temporarily halt new vineyard plantings nationwide (even within the small allowance EU rules currently permit) until the market stabilises. The bigger châteaux and merchants, relatively cushioned, are being urged to not squeeze their smaller partners too hard – for example, by avoiding canceling contracts at the last minute – in order to maintain the fabric of the supply chain.
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Monitoring and Early Warning: The government intends to set up better monitoring of wine inventories and plantings to avoid such a severe imbalance in future. This could involve improved data collection on stocks (so that a building surplus is flagged early) and tighter control on vine planting authorizations in regions where a risk of surplus is identified. Essentially, a more proactive management of the sector – learning from this crisis to prevent the next.
Reactions: These measures, while welcomed, have met mixed feelings. Many growers are grateful for the assistance, noting that without the distillation fund or the uprooting payments, they would have gone under completely. However, there is also frustration: some see the aid as too little, too late, or complain that bureaucracy slowed its rollout (e.g. EU approval for the distillation aid took time while farms were already failing). Others lament that it has come to this at all – that decades of mis-forecasting demand led to planting too many vines. The government’s balancing act is to relieve the short-term pain while nudging the wine sector toward a more sustainable model for the future.
10. Paths to Transformation and Hopes of Recovery
Amid the crisis, there are attempts to transform the French wine industry to ensure its long-term survival and to adapt to changing realities. Some signs of potential recovery or at least resilience include:
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Quality Over Quantity (Premiumisation): A number of wineries are pivoting from volume to value. Instead of trying to sell large quantities of undistinguished wine, they aim to produce less but better wine that can fetch a higher price per bottle. This often involves shifting to more sustainable viticulture (organic or biodynamic farming), lowering yields to concentrate quality, and highlighting unique terroirs. The organic wine sector in France, for instance, has grown rapidly over the past decade. By converting to organic and obtaining certification, growers hope to tap into a market segment where demand is still growing and consumers pay a premium. Already, about 14% of French vineyards are certified organic (or in conversion), and that percentage is rising each year. Wineries going this route include those in Bordeaux who are leaving the generic AOC category and instead bottling under the looser Vin de France designation to have more freedom in style and farming – effectively betting that niche, story-driven wines can succeed where bulk wine cannot.
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Diversification of Products: Some winegrowers are diversifying their production to reduce reliance on traditional wine sales. This includes developing wine-adjacent products: for example, making sparkling wines, craft vermouths, or grape juice, which open new markets. Others are experimenting with low-alcohol or alcohol-free wines to appeal to health-conscious consumers – a challenging but potentially rewarding pivot as these categories grow. In areas of the southwest, a few ex-winegrowers have started planting alternative crops on former vineyard land – such as olive groves, orchards, or even cannabis (for CBD production) – though these remain experimental and require different expertise. There are also discussions about integrating solar farms among the vines (agrivoltaism) to generate energy and extra income on vineyard land without fully abandoning viticulture.
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Wine Tourism and Direct Sales: As traditional distribution falters, many French wineries are putting more emphasis on oenotourism – attracting visitors for tours, tastings, and on-site sales. Regions like Bordeaux, which historically were less geared to casual drop-in tourists (compared to, say, Napa Valley or Tuscany), are changing their approach. More châteaux now have tasting rooms, offer vineyard walks, or even B&B accommodations. This not only provides an additional revenue stream, but also fosters consumer loyalty – a visitor who has a memorable day at a vineyard is more likely to buy that wine again and recommend it. The government has supported this through tourism grants and by promoting French wine regions as travel destinations. Even crisis-hit areas like the Gironde are leveraging their heritage (beautiful châteaux, wine museums, festivals) to draw crowds. Though tourism won’t solve overproduction, it can help individual estates survive by selling direct at retail price (much higher margin than bulk wholesale).
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Innovation and Grape Adaptation: In response to climate change and shifting tastes, innovation is happening on the technical front. Bordeaux’s approval of new grape varieties (such as Touriga Nacional, Marselan, and others more heat-resistant) is a significant move; a few pioneering châteaux have already planted these and early signs are promising (e.g. wines with fresher acidity even in hot years). Embracing such changes could make Bordeaux wines more consistent under climate stress and perhaps even create new styles that intrigue consumers. Similarly, vintners are exploring new winemaking techniques – like fermenting at cooler temperatures for lighter styles, or using less oak – to produce wines that align with modern preferences (fruity, easy-drinking, lower alcohol). There is also a small but growing natural wine movement in Bordeaux and southwest (traditionally this was more in the Loire or Jura), which can open up a different market of aficionados.
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Leanering and Professional Training: The crisis has forced many wineries to scrutinize their operations and cut costs. Some have merged facilities or formed sharing agreements (e.g. sharing expensive harvesting machines or pooling marketing budgets) to improve efficiency. Additionally, professional training is being offered to help winegrowers adapt – for instance, courses on digital marketing (to sell wine online directly to consumers), or training in agro-tourism, or even career conversion programs for those exiting wine. The hope is that a leaner, smarter generation of wine entrepreneurs will emerge from this difficult period, better equipped to run a profitable business in a changed market landscape.
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Signs of Market Stabilisation: On the horizon, there are a few hopeful signs. The reduction in vineyard area and distillation of surpluses should gradually clear the excess wine; some analysts predict that by 2025–2026 the balance of supply and demand in Bordeaux might be restored, albeit at a lower volume level. Global wine consumption, while not booming, is at least not collapsing – in some countries wine is gaining new audiences (e.g. younger consumers in the US are developing a taste for wine as they age). French wine exports, despite difficulties, saw a slight uptick in late 2024 thanks to a weaker euro and aggressive promotion in North America. And domestically, there are efforts to reconnect French people with wine culture – for example, reviving wine education in culinary schools and promoting moderate wine drinking as compatible with a healthy lifestyle (walking a fine line given health lobby scrutiny). If these efforts succeed even modestly, they could help at the margins.
In conclusion, the road to recovery is steep and the French wine industry of the future will likely be smaller and more differentiated than in the past. The crisis is forcing a transformation that, painful as it is, could yield a more sustainable sector – one that produces closer to what consumers want, that innovates and adapts, and that can better weather environmental and market fluctuations. There is cautious optimism that, having hit “rock bottom,” French wineries can gradually rebuild and reinvent themselves for a new era.
11. Conclusion
The current crisis engulfing French wineries – epitomized by the unprecedented liquidation of estates even in hallowed regions like Bordeaux – stems from a perfect storm of declining consumption, oversupply, climate pressures, and economic strains. In particular, the slump in red wine demand and years of overproduction have left a yawning imbalance, hitting the southwest of France with full force. Many factors are intertwined: an aging generation of vintners without successors; rules and market structures that were slow to adjust; and external challenges from climate change to global competition. The outcome has been severe financial distress across the wine sector, forcing emergency measures to prevent a total collapse of this flagship French industry.
The response – from vine pull-ups to crisis distillation and aid packages – shows both the determination to save the sector and the magnitude of the problem. There is no quick fix; instead, a fundamental re-calibration is underway. In the short term, pain is being shared (through destroyed wine and uprooted vineyards) to remove excess supply. In the longer term, French winegrowers are rethinking their approach, focusing on quality, diversity, and resilience. The hope is that fewer but healthier wineries will emerge, catering to a world where wine is no longer a mass commodity but a cherished, if occasionally consumed, cultural product.
France’s wine history is millennia old and has weathered many upheavals – from phylloxera in the 19th century to world wars in the 20th. The current crisis, daunting as it is, represents another chapter of challenge and change. With concerted effort by growers, government, and industry leaders, the French wine sector aims to turn the page from this period of surfeit and sorrow toward a more balanced and vibrant future. As one industry veteran put it, “We’ve had too much wine, not enough drinkers – now we must find the right fit between what we produce and what the world wants.” The coming years will test the adaptability of French winemakers, but their response so far – though born of desperation – shows a resolve to ensure that French vineyards will continue to produce and thrive, albeit in new ways, for generations to come.
Sources:
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Laurence Girard, Le Monde – “Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes” (20 June 2023) – Key statistics on Bordeaux growers in difficulty (1,371 growers, 35k ha) and quote on barrel prices vs cost (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes) (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes).
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Laurence Girard, Le Monde – “La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français” (2 Aug 2024) – Data on halving of French wine consumption from 46 to 24 million hl (1970s to 2023) and expert note of 4–5 million hl structural surplus, mainly in red wine regions (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français) (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français).
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Jacques Dupont, Le Point – “Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?” (4 Dec 2024) – Discussion of demand drop for even top Bordeaux; notes that “la baisse de la consommation de vin, notamment des rouges” plus poor international outlook has created a tough market (Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?), and mention of China’s contracting demand (Pourquoi la crise du vin rattrape les grands crus de Bordeaux ?).
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BFMTV / Sud Ouest – “Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d’un château” (Oct 2024) – Report on Château Grand Housteau’s liquidation, with wine auctioned at ~5 cents a bottle (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château). Contains reactions: CIVB vice-president calling it “inconceivable” (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château) and Confédération Paysanne warning of “risque de banqueroute générale” (general bankruptcy risk) urging public intervention (Gironde: des bouteilles de vins vendues à cinq centimes après la liquidation judiciaire d'un château).
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Alexandre Abellan, Vitisphere – “Les chiffres inédits de la crise du vin de Bordeaux” (24 Apr 2025) – Reveals tribunal data: 265 insolvency cases in Bordeaux vineyards in 2024, a 58% increase vs 2023 (Les chiffres inédits de la crise du vin de Bordeaux), highlighting the wave of failures.
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Additional industry and news reports on French wine crisis and measures (2023–2024) – covering emergency distillation into ethanol (La chute de consommation de vin redessine le paysage viticole français), vine uprooting schemes (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes), and personal accounts of vintners considering exiting the sector (Le Bordelais, en crise de surproduction, contraint à l’arrachage de vignes). These corroborate the trends of oversupply, falling red wine sales, climate challenges, and the multifaceted response to rescue the industry.