Klik op de foto's voor een vergroting.
Duurzame wijn Zuid Afrika
Er is een nieuwe kwaliteitsaanduiding voor Zuid Afrikaanse wijnen. Voldoen de wijnboeren aan de daarvoor gestelde eisen, dan mogen ze Integrity en Sustainability op de flessenhals-sticker zetten. Dat gebeurt vanaf de jaargang 2010. De sticker moet niet alleen garanderen dat wat op het etiket staat de waarheid is, maar ook dat onafhankelijke inspecteurs hebben gecontroleerd of de wijn voldoet aan de eisen van WWF Biodiversity en Wildlife Initiative. De website Bella Online meldt er verder over:
‘South African wines will be sporting a new seal on their bottle necks. The small sticker bears the words Integrity and Sustainability and certifies that the wine in the bottle has been produced sustainably in an earth-friendly manner.
For almost forty years South African wines exported in bottle have carried a small sticker, known locally as ‘the bus ticket’, whose code numbers allow the wine to be traced back to the producer. The sticker certifies that statements on the label about vintage, contents and origin are true, and that the wine has passed a tasting test by a team of inspectors. The two numbers on the seal identify the producer and the wine inside. Quality wines are under inspection from officers of the Wine & Spirit Board all the way from the vineyard to bottling. Only those wines to be sold without mention of vintage, origin and grape variety escape attention – plus those intended for export in bulk for bottling overseas.
World Heritage
Now a new layer has been added to certification. South Africa has been working towards sustainability since 1998 when Integrated Production of Wine guidelines were first published and they are now met by more than 95% of growers and wineries.
With a tiny exception all South African wine is grown near the coast at the southern tip of Africa in an area called the Cape Floral Kingdom. This is a World Heritage site and the smallest and richest of the world’s six floral kingdoms. More than 10,000 different plant species live there with 70% growing nowhere else.
Since the Dutch East India Company first established a station at the Cape 350 years ago many foreign plants have been introduced. Most of these need much more water than indigenous plants and high priority is being given to the replacing of these ‘aliens’ with local vegetation.
Of course, grape vines are alien plants but we want to keep these so for balance vineyard owners have set aside more than 120,000 hectares for conservation in the past five years. In most wine farms acreage devoted to grapevines is matched or outweighed by that dedicated to natural vegetation under schemes managed by WWF Biodiversity and Wildlife Initiative.
Traceble
The new Integrity and Sustainability seal introduced with the 2010 vintage certifies that not only is the label information correct, that the vines is traceable back to the vineyard but that the wine was grown and made and bottles sustainably and the vineyards and wineries involved have passed WWF Biodiversity and Wildlife Initiative audits by independent inspectors.
To check the code numbers on the seal: www.swsa.co.za




