首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The road from Mildura to Merbein, in north-west Victoria, is a sad sight. Many of its farms are covered with wine grapes, dying
The road from Mildura to Merbein, in north-west Victoria, is a sad sight. Many of its farms are covered with wine grapes, dying
admin
2012-03-23
10
问题
The road from Mildura to Merbein, in north-west Victoria, is a sad sight. Many of its farms are covered with wine grapes, dying on the vines. Farmers planted the vines hoping to cash in on the seemingly endless boom in Australian wine. But in 2007 the boom turned to bust, forcing many farmers to walk away from grapes and land they cannot sell.
Over the past 15 years Australia’s wine industry has been one of its great success stories. Export revenues last year reached A$3 billion ($2. 4 billion), four times the figure from 1997. Britain, America and Canada, among the most competitive markets for wine, are Australia’s three biggest customers. But the suffering in places like Mildura and nearby Renmark in South Australia is a sign that the industry fell victim to its own success.
Flushed with a growing demand for Australian wines, a grape shortage, and soaring grape prices, growers rushed to plant more vines in the late 1990s. In 1998 they put in a record 16,000 new hectares, double the new plantings two years earlier. In 2005 Australia produced almost 2 million tons of wine grapes, a quarter more than analysts say its markets can absorb.
Then came Australia’s worst drought in a century. Mildura and Renmark are surrounded by desert, and fruit farms and vineyards survive only with irrigation from the Murray River, the lifeblood of Australia’s agriculture. Smaller firms, which supply the big winemakers with some of their grapes, faced a double whammy: falling grape prices and cuts to irrigation water. Stephen Strachan, chief executive of the Wine- makers’ Federation of Australia, reckons the drought was a turning point, even a tragic one in some cases, in forcing the industry back to "sustainable levels". The planting rush has ended. The 3,600 hectares of new vines planted in 2006 almost equaled the 3,400 hectares of vines ripped out of the ground that year.
The drought has also led to much soul-searching among Australia’s 2,000 wine producers about how the industry can recapture its reputation for quality wines. There is now stiff competition in the mid-market from other New World producers, notably New Zealand, where the wine industry is booming. Much Australian wine during the grape glut found its way onto the world market as bulk or "commodity" wine, sold at low prices or even at a loss. This harmed Australia’s reputation among consumers. Australian producers now face the task of earning a reputation for quality rather than quantity. The appreciation of the Australian dollar, which makes Australian wines more expensive overseas, has brought a new urgency to the job.
Historically, many Australian winemakers have derided the French approach to making wine, especially the idea that the finest wines come only from a terroir—the union of climate and soil characteristic of each place. Australian producers instead pride themselves on what they regard as a less snooty and more democratic approach: blending grapes from different regions to achieve a consistent wine. But some are now asking whether marketing an Australian wine’s locality, as much as its grape variety, might work better.
Some smaller producers are already doing just that. In Margaret River in Western Australia, for example, small winemakers produce 3% of the country’s production, mainly at the high end of the market, and independently of the big companies that predominate in eastern Australia. Denis Horgan, the owner of Leeuwin Estate, raves about the region’s soil and climate, and prides himself on Leeuwin’s high-quality wines, which sell for as much as A$95 a bottle. Steve Webber, the winemaker at De Bortoli, a family winery in the Yarra Valley of Victoria, argues that Australia can no longer hope to compete on price alone. "We have to be malting more interesting wines, and we have to look more to our regions, as the French do," he says.
Australia’s 2008 grape harvest is expected to be back down to 1. 6 million tons. Grapes are once again in short supply, and prices are rising modestly. But only the foolhardy would take this as a chance to make a killing, and start planting again.
The drought has all of the following influences EXCEPT
选项
A、. forcing the industry back to "sustainable levels".
B、leading to appreciation of the Australian dollar.
C、ending the vines planting rush in Australia.
D、making the wine producers reflect on quality.
答案
B
解析
选项A、C在第4段段末直接提及;选项D在第5段段首提及;而选项B所提到的澳元的升值出现在第5段最后一句.文中并未提及是这次干旱造成的.因此选B。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/i1iO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
ReligioninAmericanLifeDiversityisthechieffeatureofreligionintheUnitedStates.AlthoughChristianityhasalways
Lastyear,whenPresidentGeorgeW.Bushannouncedthatfederalfundscouldbeusedtosupportresearchonhumanembryonicstem
"Heavens!"exclaimedtheauntofClovis,"here’ssomeoneIknowbearingdownonus.Ican’trememberhisname,butbelunchedwi
GivenShakespeare’spopularityasanactorandaplaywrightandhisconspicuousfinancialsuccess,itwasnotsurprisingthatje
TheAntarcticisthemostremotecontinentandthelasttobediscovered,butitconstitutesupaboutatenthofthe【
TheAntarcticisthemostremotecontinentandthelasttobediscovered,butitconstitutesupaboutatenthofthe【
GreenpeaceisaninternationalenvironmentalorganizationfoundedinVancouver,Canadain1971.Itsgoalistoassuretheabilit
Shestartedinthebathroom.Sheputtheshavingbrush,thedisposablerazor,thetoothbrushandthedentalflossinalargebla
A、financingB、weatherC、transportD、publicsupportB
OncefoundalmostentirelyinthewesternUnitedStatesandinAsia,dinosaurfossilsarenowbeingdiscoveredonallsevencont
随机试题
若1个氨基酸有3个遗传密码,则这3个遗传密码的前两个核苷酸通常是相同的。()
A.清洁中段尿培养,菌落计数为104~105/mlB.清洁中段尿培养,菌落计数为103/mlC.清洁中段尿培养,菌落计数≥105/mlD.清洁中段尿培养,菌落计数为5×105/mlE.清洁中段尿培养,菌落计数为10×105/m1尿细菌培养可疑阳
呼吸功能不全的患者开胸术后镇痛宜用
甲、乙签订一份试用买卖合同,约定乙试用甲生产的某精密仪器3个月,如果试用满意应一次付清全部价款10万元,仪器自价款付清时起归乙所有;如果试用不满意,则乙应返还仪器并按10元/日的标准支付使用费。在试用期间,乙以该精密仪器作价出资,与丙共同投资成立了A公司,
甲和乙都是某服装外贸公司的高级业务员。甲年轻富有,豁达开朗,口头禅是“鄙人有家有业,不愁吃不愁穿,只求有朝一日能实现儿时的梦想,独自驱车横穿撒哈拉沙漠,与非洲土著居民围着篝火唱歌跳舞。”乙则精力充沛,办事风风火火,喜欢对人指手划脚,发号施令,一直渴望有朝一
SoonafterDaveleftuniversity,oneofhisuncles,whowas【C1】______andhadnochildrenofhisown,diedand【C2】______Davealo
Wilson:Hello,thisisWilson.CanIspeaktoPeter,please?Johnson:______
中国共产党在全民族抗战中起到中流砥柱的作用表现在()
Inthewakeof11September,Visionics,aleadingmanufacturer,issuedafactsheetexplaininghowitstechnologycouldenhance
Thefinalproposalswerearatherunsuccessful______betweentheneedforprofitabilityandthedemandsoflocalconservationis
最新回复
(
0
)