Ned K.
In
February this year angry grape growers from the Riverland wine and vineyard
area of South Australia descended on the city of Adelaidecomplete with vineyard
tractors and a tip truck full of grapes. They stopped at the state Parliament
House where they received a lot of attention from the public and local
constabulary when they started tipping the grapes on to the road to symbolise
that the grapes they were growing could not be sold at all or only at below the
cost of production prices.
Large
wineries are importing grape juice from vineyards in Argentina and Chile rather
than buying from local growers and/or squeezing down the price paid to growers
as low as $80 a tonne. It costs on average $240 a tonne to produce the grapes.
Consequently,
growers are on the bones of their backside. Many of the approximately 1500
small producers have worked and lived in the Riverland for two or more
generations. They are an important part of the Riverland community. Their
demise will have a negative impact on towns like Berri, Waikerie, Renmark and
further up the Murray in places like Mildura.
Their
desperation showed as they assembled on the steps of Parliament House. An
angrier group of people on Parliament House steps has not been seen for a long
time. They are looking for answers and chose Parliament House steps as a
destination in the hope that with a state election in March this year, some
politicians may take notice.
They have
formed their own association, the Riverland Grape Growers Association, complete
with web site.
Some of
the grape growers and vineyard workers have traditionally tried for work in the
wineries in the Riverland to supplement their incomes. However the winery
workers are on the wrong end of decisions also made by the same wineries who
import the grape juice from overseas. Once the grape juice arrives, it is
processed in to wine. However instead of being bottled in the Riverland
wineries, there is an increasing trend for it to be transported to ports here
and pumped in to huge bladders in ships bound for Europe. Once in Europe, the
wine is transported to bottling halls for bottling ready for retail sale to the
people of Europe.
The big
wineries, mostly foreign owned corporations, have worked out that it is more
profitable to bottle the wine overseas than in local wineries. Over time, this
has caused hundreds of lost jobs in the wineries across Australia, adding to
the stress for local communities.
When Is An Australian Wine
Australian Made?
So when you
open that bottle of wine with a label saying it is made somewhere in Australia,
have a think about it. It may in fact be from a vineyard in South America and
it may not even be bottled at the winery claiming to have “produced” it. Grape
juice is cheaper from South America because of exploitation of cheap labour,
often the labour of displaced peasants from their land which they too have
farmed for generations.
No wonder
there were both grape growers and winery workers at the protest on Parliament
House steps. “Free trade” of the international capital market is teaching the people who are their enemies and who are their friends.
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