Booming wine market attracts countereiters, even in Bordeaux
Petrus, Romanee-Conti, Chateau d’Yquem — wines coveted by connoisseurs, and targeted by counterfeiters. According to French wine professionals, a handful of rare and fine wines face the same threat from fraud as luxury handbags and designer sunglasses.Trafficking in fake wine has “always existed a little, but it’s definitely amplified with the rising prices of fine wines”, said Sylvain Boivert, director of the association representing Bordeaux wines classified back in 1855, the Conseil des Grands Crus Classes en 1855. To the relief of many, the fakery remains small scale. “We are not dealing with industrial counterfeit production, unlike the luxury brands,” he said. The counterfeiting “touches five to six of the very top wine estates in
Nor have
Jeroboams, the equivalent of four bottles, of the 1945 vintage from this 1.8 hectare (4.4 acre) estate have recently been sold in auctions, according to Laurent Ponsot, a renowned Burgundy producer. Alas, Romanee-Conti did not bottle their 1945 in Jeroboams.Ponsot, owner of Domaine Ponsot, has had his own misadventures with counterfeiters. At a sale in
The methods used to fool buyers are only limited by the imagination of the counterfeiters: photocopied labels, different chateaux names on the capsule and the label, to name a few. Sometimes the bottle is authentic but doesn’t contain the wine or the vintage indicated, or only partially, the level of the wine having been topped off with another wine by using a syringe. “The further one is from the original market, the cruder the fakes,” said Angelique de Lencquesaing, founder of the Internet auction website IdealWine. As new markets emerge, fraudsters seize the opportunity to cash in. According to Magrez, counterfeiting increased “when Russians began consuming after the fall of the Wall.” “There was an enormous temptation, because of the considerable demand.” Add to that the immense Chinese market. While the problem of counterfeit wine remains “very anecdotal” on the French market, it “could take on a much more serious amplitude in
By Dominique Schroeder
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