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California wine industry evolving to compete in 21st century
Author(s) -
Rachael E. Goodhue,
Richard Green,
Dale Heien,
Philip Martin
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
california agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.472
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 2160-8091
pISSN - 0008-0845
DOI - 10.3733/ca.v062n01p12
Subject(s) - wine , per capita , agricultural economics , business , consumption (sociology) , production (economics) , grape wine , quality (philosophy) , aging of wine , marketing , economics , food science , biology , population , social science , philosophy , macroeconomics , epistemology , sociology , demography
The California wine industry is growing and changing amidst a global revolution in grape growing, wine production, wine marketing and consumer tastes. California accounted for roughly 90% of the value of U.S. wine production in 2006. U.S. per capita wine consumption and the quality of wine consumed continue to rise. The largest California wineries have long accounted for most California wine shipments and continue to expand with respect to volume and number of labels. While small wineries sell most of their wine directly to end-users, many midsized wineries face challenges in an increasingly crowded marketplace.

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