Didier Chopin had been buying bulk wines from Spain and Southern France, blending them and adjusting the flavours before carbonating the wine, bottling it and selling it as Champagne.
His sentence was a €100,000 fine and a four-year prison sentence, three of which are suspended. His wine company was fined a further €300,000. To me that sounds pretty light, given the amount of money he made.
Finally, wines which do not conform to the IGP or AOP regulations and wines blended from multiple regions can be sold under the category of Vin de France.
These companies buy grapes, juice and wine from multiple sources, including caves cooperatives and independent estates, to blend, age and modify into wines which they sell under their own label or that of a corporate client, for example a supermarket own-brand or the house wine of a restaurant chain.
This system is administered by the douanes, the French customs authority responsible for payment of appropriate duties and protecting the consumer from fraud.
The douanes regularly verify producers by audits of the physical stocks of wine and the inventory records. The paper trail can be quite complicated which is why it can take years before the douanes have enough evidence to intervene.
It’s also true that an AOP label is no guarantee of high quality. There are plenty of mediocre Saint-Emilion and Bourgogne wines out there, even those bottled by individual estates.
Perhaps more importantly for the wine trade, these forms of fraud undermine consumer confidence in France’s wine regulations and AOPs, which can damage sales of honestly labelled wines.
It is also worth noting that independent wine shops or cavistes are more likely to know the true source of the wines they sell than a supermarket, that seem to be the targets of this kind of fraud.
Jonathan Hesford holds a WSET Level 3 and a Postgraduate Diploma in Viticulture and Oenology from Lincoln University, New Zealand. He is the owner and winemaker of Domaine Treloar in Roussillon, www.domainetreloar.com.