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OPINION - FRENCH WINE

HEALTH

‘France is treating wine makers like drug dealers’

A French government plan to include reinforced health warnings for wine has gone down the wrong way with the country's wine industry chiefs. The head of the Bordeaux wine association tells The Local why the government's plan is akin to treating them like "drug dealers".

‘France is treating wine makers like drug dealers’
"Thanks for supporting our industry". French President François Hollande enjoys a glass of wine. Photo: Vin et Societé

All is not well with France's famed wine industry.

Despite fears of a rise in wine taxes seemingly having been allayed by the country’s agriculture minister this week, industry leaders are still nursing a headache over government plans to reinforce health warnings on wine bottles and packaging.

In reaction to the plan, leaders of the wine industry – which represents France’s second-biggest export sector – have mobilised and created a lobby group Vin et Societé (Wine and Society) to take on the government.

It launched its publicity campaign last month, including a new website, which featured a photograph of French President François Hollande enjoying a glass of wine with the message: “Thank You, Mr President, for your support for our country’s second-largest export earner.”

What has riled the wine industry, however, apart from mooted tax hikes, is a plan to reinforce health warnings, including on wine bottles, as well as to ban positive talk about wine in the French media.

'Vin and Societé' have slammed the “moralising trend” which will “reduce personal responsibility” among French people.

According to Sud Ouest newspaper, the French government plans to change the warning from "Alcohol abuse is dangerous for your health" to "Alcohol is dangerous for your health".

For Bernard Farges, chair of CIVB (Comité interprofessionnel des Vins de Bordeaux), who recently described talks with the French government as "alarming", the change is "unacceptable" becasue "the concept of moderate drinking will disappear".

“You cannot warn about the dangers of alcohol or suggest how many glasses you should drink by putting it on a label on a bottle of wine. People need to be educated about this," Farges tells The Local.

“It’s like the logo for pregnant women, which warns them to avoid wine. Women should be taught about the dangers, that’s a job for schools, not for wine bottle labels. The purpose of the wine label is to teach people about the wine. You cannot insult the consumer’s intelligence.

“These measures are bad for the industry and bad for our image. French wine is a very good product. Wine makers in Italy are not up against the same problems we are in France and it could become difficult for our industry in a few years.

("Of course seeing "wine kills" on the bottle will ruin the atmosphere." Vin et Societé)

Whether Farges is right or not, one thing is certain – there is plenty at stake for his industry.

Despite a fall in domestic consumption, France remains the world’s largest producer of wine and is the world’s largest wine exporter, with €7.84 billion worth of plonk heading abroad each year, mostly to the US and China.

“How will we be able to explain to our Japanese and Chinese clients that the wine they are buying is bad for their health?

“We are being treated like drug dealers. We cannot accept that."

Powerful lobby at work

Farges believes the move is being pushed ahead to appease a lobby group that has, in his view, become all too powerful in France and is encouraging the government to take “repressive measures”.

“In France there is a health lobby which includes a small number of very influential people,” he said. “These people are very close to the minister of health. The ministers in France have been traumatized by the contaminated blood scandal in the 1980s and the deadly heatwave of 2003. Now they're scared.

"Some advisers at the Ministry of Health want to see the consumption of wine in France fall, to reduce alcoholism," said Farges. "But this policy does not work."

Farges believes the wine industry is being punished for a change in French drinking culture which continues to concern authorities, but which he says has nothing to do with plonk.

“Since binge drinking arrived in France, the consumption of wine has actually gone down, but drunkenness has increased,” he said. “The government wants to solve the problem of alcoholism, that’s normal, it is an illness, but these policies just don’t work.

“People who have problems with alcohol tend to drink spirits rather than wine and the young people who binge drink normally have cocktails."

Farges says if the aim is really to cut down on drinking, then young people need to be educated and “socialized” using “responsible discourse” rather than health warnings on packaging.

“France’s wine industry is vital for the country both economically and culturally. The government should not treat everyone in France as an alcoholic.”

Should wine carry clear health warnings or do you agree with Bernard Farges?

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HEALTH

Danish parties agree to raise abortion limit to 18 weeks

Denmark's government has struck a deal with four other parties to raise the point in a pregnancy from which a foetus can be aborted from 12 weeks to 18 weeks, in the first big change to Danish abortion law in 50 years.

Danish parties agree to raise abortion limit to 18 weeks

The government struck the deal with the Socialist Left Party, the Red Green Alliance, the Social Liberal Party and the Alternative party, last week with the formal announcement made on Monday  

“In terms of health, there is no evidence for the current week limit, nor is there anything to suggest that there will be significantly more or later abortions by moving the week limit,” Sophie Løhde, Denmark’s Minister of the Interior and Health, said in a press release announcing the deal.

The move follows the recommendations of Denmark’s Ethics Council, which in September 2023 proposed raising the term limit, pointing out that Denmark had one of the most restrictive abortion laws in Western Europe. 

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Under the deal, the seven parties, together with the Liberal Alliance and the Conservatives, have also entered into an agreement to replace the five regional abortion bodies with a new national abortion board, which will be based in Aarhus. 

From July 1st, 2025, this new board will be able to grant permission for abortions after the 18th week of pregnancy if there are special considerations to take into account. 

The parties have also agreed to grant 15-17-year-olds the right to have an abortion without parental consent or permission from the abortion board.

Marie Bjerre, Denmark’s minister for Digitalization and Equality, said in the press release that this followed logically from the age of sexual consent, which is 15 years old in Denmark. 

“Choosing whether to have an abortion is a difficult situation, and I hope that young women would get the support of their parents. But if there is disagreement, it must ultimately be the young woman’s own decision whether she wants to be a mother,” she said. 

The bill will be tabled in parliament over the coming year with the changes then coming into force on June 1st, 2025.

The right to free abortion was introduced in Denmark in 1973. 

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