France, one of the world’s top winemakers, will disburse €130 million ($150 million) to help farmers uproot more vines in a sector hit hard by climate change, weak global demand and trade wars.
This year, something is starkly different in one of France's most celebrated wine regions and other parts of Europe. AP The landscape in the prestigious vineyards of Bordeaux looks the same as ever, ...
The French Agriculture Ministry said on Monday it would give the wine industry additional support of 130 million euros ($149.80 million) for the further uprooting of vines, to guard against excessive ...
Champagne makers in France say many Americans still use the word “champagne” for almost any sparkling wine. For them, the ...
The French government will pay its wine producers some $216 million to destroy nearly 80 million gallons of surplus vino that they were unable to sell. French wine producers are getting bailed out ...
A fall in demand for French wines, a more competitive market and lingering pandemic problems have hit winemakers in the regions of Bordeaux and Languedoc so hard that the French government will soon ...
Anne-Sophie Anache was born in the French city of Lyon and grew up in the coastal village of Agde, located between the southern French cities of Narbonne and Montpellier. Some of her family members ...
On to the news. Today I’ll discuss recent protests in France as well as government aid for uprooting vineyards; the ...