Canadian wineries say scrapping provincial trade barriers would add billions to GDP
HALIFAX — Canada’s wine sector is worth more than $10 billion a year and the industry says a few tweaks — like scrapping domestic trade barriers — could add billions of dollars more to the national economy.
A new report from Deloitte, commissioned by the Wine Growers of Canada, says the key is getting Canadians to buy at least 51 per cent of their wine from homegrown producers over the next 15 years. That would increase the value of the wine sector from the current $10.1 billion to $13.7 billion, including from spinoff industries like shipping and tourism. The sector has plateaued at about 40 per cent domestic market penetration for almost two decades.
“We’re not going to be reaching 51 per cent by increasing wine sales across Canada. We’re going to be increasing to 51 per cent by displacing imports over time,” Dan Paszkowski, president of the Wine Growers of Canada, said in an interview.
The report says homegrown products make up more than half of sales in each of the leading wine countries in the world, including France where consumers opt for a domestic bottle 83 per cent of the time.
