首页
登录
职称英语
The road from Mildura to Merbein, in north-west Victoria, is a sad sight. Many
The road from Mildura to Merbein, in north-west Victoria, is a sad sight. Many
游客
2024-12-31
31
管理
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 Remark 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. Mildum 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 Winemakers’ 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 making 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. [br] In terms of approaches to making wine,
选项
A、Australian winemakers look much to climate and soil of each place.
B、most Australian producers adopt the same approach as French do.
C、French winemakers combine different grapes to produce a wine.
D、the French approach is increasingly welcomed by Australian winemakers.
答案
D
解析
第6段介绍了澳洲和法国的酿酒方法,第7段提到一些小型酿酒商已经开始这种尝试了,doing that指代的是第6段提到的marketing an Australian wine’s locality,而这种方法是法国人用的。结合第7段最后一句Steve Webber的话语中提到的"as the French do",可知法国的酿酒法在澳洲越来越受欢迎。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3892237.html
相关试题推荐
TheroadfromMilduratoMerbein,innorth-westVictoria,isasadsight.Many
TheroadfromMilduratoMerbein,innorth-westVictoria,isasadsight.Many
TheroadfromMilduratoMerbein,innorth-westVictoria,isasadsight.Many
ThelongestreigninBritishhistorywas______.A、QueenVictoriaB、QueenElizabet
It’sbeendescribedasoneofthegreatestVictoriangothichorrorstorieso
It’sbeendescribedasoneofthegreatestVictoriangothichorrorstorieso
It’sbeendescribedasoneofthegreatestVictoriangothichorrorstorieso
______doesNOTbelongtothemajorpoetsoftheVictorianAge.A、PercyByssheShe
NewZealandissituatedabout1,500km______.A、north-westofAustraliaB、south-e
TheVictorianAgewaslargelyanageof______,eminentlyrepresentedbyDickens
随机试题
Theconceptofaloyalopposition-the______ofmodemdemocracy--rarelyprevails
根据我们的调查,西雅图(Seattle)现在是设立企业的最佳地点,取代了亚特兰大(Atlanta)作为最热门地点的地位。(elbowout)Accordin
青春前期的Tumer综合征最常见的临床表现是A.身材矮小 B.先天性畸形 C
患者胁部皮肤灼热疼痛2天后患部皮肤出现簇集粟粒大小丘状疱疹,呈带状排列,疱壁紧张
国家信息中心近日发布的《中国信息社会发展报告2015》显示,2015年全国信息社
申请购买经济适用住房应同时符合的条件包括()。A.具有当地城镇户口 B.家庭
概念的关键特征越明显,学习越容易。扩大关键特征的方法不包括()。A.实物直观
患者,女,35岁,右上第一磨牙面纵向隐裂且累及牙髓,临床牙冠较短,咬合紧,根管
投保人甲为自己价值为9万元的财产,向乙保险公司投保了保险金额为8万元的家庭财产保
某施工单位接受邀请,按照参加投标预备会→进行现场考察→编制投标文件的程序参加了一
最新回复
(
0
)