AsiaOne – AFP, Feb 23, 2014
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Grape pickers harvest fruit from the vines at the Chateau Luchey-Halde vineyards in Merignac, southwestern France as the traditional wine harvest begins September 16, 2013. |
DIJON,
France - A winemaker in France's Burgundy region appears in court Monday for
refusing to use pesticides in his organic vineyard despite a government order.
Environmentalists
have backed his refusal but other local winemakers have denounced the support
campaign around him as full of "falsehoods" and defended their
practices.
Emmanuel
Giboulot is being pursued by an arm of the agriculture ministry for not heeding
a local directive in Burgundy's wine-growing Cote d'Or area to regularly treat
vines against a leaf-hopping insect that causes an infectious disease called
"flavescence doree".
The disease
first appeared in 1949 in France's southwestern Armagnac region.
It then
spread steadily, reaching the wine-producing areas of Cognac, Languedoc,
northern and southern Rhone, the Loire Valley and Bordeaux.
There is no
cure yet for the bacterial infection, which can kill young vines and greatly
reduce the productivity of older ones.
After the
discovery of the disease in Burgundy's Beaune region, the local administration
last June ordered all vineyard owners in the Cote d'Or area to treat their
vineyards with pesticides.
But
Giboulot has doggedly defied the order and shunned pesticides on his 10-hectare
(24-acre) estate straddling the Cote de Beaune, the southern part of the Cote
d'Or that is home to the great names in Burgundy wine.
He argues
that the order would destroy the work of his father, who converted to
biodynamic farming in the 1970s.
Like
refusing vaccination
Giboulot
was prosecuted after a check by local agricultural authorities in July and
faces up to six months in prison and a 30,000-euro ($41,000) fine.
His
defiance has won the support of leading environmental groups including
Greenpeace and France's Green party, part of the ruling coalition with
President Francois Hollande's Socialists.
His
supporters will stage a demonstration on Monday outside the court in Dijon
where Giboulot is due to appear.
"In
the absence of a proven health threat, freedom of choice should be given,"
said Sandrine Belier, a Green party lawmaker in the European Parliament.
Environmentalists
argue that instead of ordering the sweeping use of pesticides, local
authorities should only monitor the disease, uproot affected vines and limit
the mandatory use of pesticides to the areas under threat.
Local
officials insist Giboulot is not being persecuted and that the step is vital to
save vineyards across the region.
"All
vines must be treated by everyone for the treatment to work," said Olivier
Lapotre, the head of the local food department.
"It's
a deadly disease for vines and very contagious and it's because of this that
such measures are obligatory," he said.
Burgundy
officials say the policy is paying off. The prefecture said only 0.20 hectares
were seriously affected by flavescence doree in 2013 and the vines there
uprooted, against 11.3 hectares in the previous year.
Denis
Thiery, the head of research at the Bordeaux wing of the French National
Institute for Agricultural Research, said the disease had "exploded in the
past decade," arguing the case for the use of pesticides.
"Almost
all French wine-growing regions have been affected except the Jura, Alsace and
Champagne," he said, adding that the order had to be respected.
"It's like
refusing a vaccination when it's mandatory," he said.
Claude
Chevalier, the head of the Burgundy Wine Board representing producers, said the
case had been overblown and defended the practices of regional winemakers.
"We
cannot tolerate the falsehoods being said about what is done in Burgundy. In
Burgundy we do not pollute," he said, adding that Giboulot "is not
the only person defending nature in Burgundy."
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