Australia and New Zealand

Table of Contents
  1. Australia
  2. Wine Australia
  3. New South Wales
  4. Victoria
  5. South Australia
  6. Western Australia
  7. Queensland
  8. Tasmania
  9. New Zealand
  10. Review Quizzes

Australia

Although Australia’s history of viticulture is relatively short—vines arrived on the continent with the First Fleet of British prisoners in 1788—the country has made its mark on the global wine market and is now a huge exporter of both its wines and its winemaking methodology.

In its earliest days as an English penal colony, Australia’s winemaking suffered from little expertise. However, free settlers from Europe began to arrive, spurred by the promise of gold, and the vine flourished, spreading from New South Wales throughout the southeast by 1850. Over 6000 liters of wine was exported to Britain by 1854. A burgeoning population thirsted for wine in the colony as well, and many small wineries sprung up throughout New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, and South Australia to meet the new demand. Penfolds and Lindemans, two of Australia’s most recognizable brands—both are now owned by Treasury Wine Estates—launched during this early period. However, as the easily extractable surface and stream deposits of gold depleted, many prospectors followed, and domestic demand for wine fell. Lowered demand, coupled with restrictive state trade barriers, led some producers to export to survive, whereas others remained small and localized—a division that exists, in exacerbated form, to this day. Economic recession and phylloxera befell Australia in the latter half of the 19th century, further harming the industry, but officials took strict and immediate measures to combat the spread of phylloxera, confining it to Victoria and a portion of New South Wales. While the root louse decimated the Victorian wine industry—Australia’s most important wine area in the late 1800s—it cleared the way for South Australia to emerge as the continent’s largest region of production. A second key factor in South Australia’s

Comments
Anonymous
  • Looking into the CSIRO their website and Wiki page show them to be based in Canberra not Adelaide.

  • 'Montana’s Lindauer brand sparkling wines are the most exported wines of the country,' Press reports indicate that the Lindauer brand was sold by Pernod Ricard New Zealand (owner of Montana/Brancott Estate) in 2010 to Lion New Zealand.

  • 'Growth as since tapered off, with total production from Waipara and Canterbury totalling 4% of wine production country wide' - Should read 'Growth has since tapered off'

  • 'Hawkes Bay is one of the most important red wines regions.' Should read 'red wine regions' instead of 'red wines regions'.

  • 'The Lower Murray zone is directly north of the Limestone Coast; the heavily irrigated, bulk wine-producing Riverland GI is the zone’s sole region. Here, the climate is continental and hot, and the region’s low rainfall, high soil salinity and water shortages make the future for agriculture in less certain.' Should that read 'less certain' instead of 'in less certain'?