Wine (Amendment) Regulations 2021 Moved by Lord Benyon That the
Grand Committee do consider the Wine (Amendment) Regulations 2021.
Relevant document: 23rd Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State,
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Lord Benyon)
(Con) My Lords, these regulations will ensure that the UK meets its
legal obligation to implement the provisions in Annexe 15 to the
TCA...Request free trial
Wine (Amendment) Regulations 2021
Moved by
That the Grand Committee do consider the Wine (Amendment)
Regulations 2021.
Relevant document: 23rd Report from the Secondary Legislation
Scrutiny Committee
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs () (Con)
My Lords, these regulations will ensure that the UK meets its
legal obligation to implement the provisions in Annexe 15 to the
TCA concerning the trade in wine. The amendments made by this
instrument concern lot marking and transitional marketing
arrangements. They will remove the requirement for VI-1
certificates to accompany imports of wine into Great Britain and
put in place provisions underpinning the simplified certification
arrangements for exports of GB wine to the EU.
Turning first to the measures that concern VI-1 certificates,
these regulations will make changes to retained EU Regulation
1308/2013 of the European Parliament and the Council and make
consequential changes to retained EU Regulation 2018/273. This
will remove the requirement for a wine imported into GB to be
accompanied by a VI-1 certificate, or a simplified form of that
certificate, where that wine has been produced in line with our
regulatory framework for wine.
This change will apply to wine imports from the EU. We are
exercising a choice not to introduce unnecessary trade barriers
in the form of self-certificates of the type mentioned in Article
3 of Annexe 15 to the TCA. This decision will ensure that wine
products originating in the EU will continue to have free and
unfettered access to the GB market. This will help to support an
industry worth more than £1 billion per annum and maintain the UK
as a global hub for the wine trade.
In parallel, we will also remove the VI-1 requirement for imports
of wine from all other countries, such as Australia, Chile, New
Zealand and the USA. This will be done on the basis that they,
too, meet our regulatory requirements. These wines represent
about 50% of the wines on our shelves and, due to EU rules, have
been subject to a VI-1 certificate to be marketed in Great
Britain.
The removal of VI-1 certification represents a positive first
step in simplifying our wine regulations to remove aspects of the
bureaucratic and discriminatory regime that we inherited from the
EU. I offer my thanks to the wine trade and noble Lords for
continuing to make such a compelling case for removing VI-1
certificates. The Government have listened and acted to remove
this unnecessary piece of red tape that we inherited from the
EU.
This SI will also make changes to retained EU law to ensure that
wines produced in GB are subject to the appropriate supervision,
inspection and authentication checks necessary to underpin the
use of the new simplified certification arrangements for exports
of GB wine to the EU. These proposals will also introduce
provisions to ensure that the lot code arrangements for wines
will continue to operate between GB and the EU. This will
implement Article 4(3) of the TCA and will be done by amending
the Food (Lot Marking) Regulations 1996. The changes will ensure
that a wine bearing a lot code that complies with EU law in a
member state can continue to be marketed in Great Britain. Lot
codes are an important tool to help to trace wine products that
have been prepared or packaged under the same conditions.
Finally, these regulations will implement Article 5 of Annexe 15
to the TCA concerning transitional arrangements for the marketing
of wine products. Amendments will be made to the Wine Regulations
2011 and the Food Information Regulations 2014 that will allow
for the marketing of wine products that, at the date of entry
into force of the TCA—1 May 2021—had been produced, described and
labelled in accordance with the rules existing at that time. The
provisions allow two years from 1 May 2021 for wine stocks to be
run down at the producer and wholesale levels, while stocks at a
retail level can continue to be sold until they are exhausted.
Transitional labelling arrangements are an important
consideration in the wine sector where products can have an
extended shelf life and their quality can appreciate over
prolonged periods of time.
Overall, this instrument is primarily concerned with introducing
the changes necessary to implement Annexe 15 to the TCA. It is
important as this helps to underpin our relationship with the EU,
which, collectively, is the most important wine-producing and
trading region on the planet. However, this instrument also marks
an important first step in freeing up our wine trade from
unnecessary inherited red tape.
We have a flourishing wine and viticulture sector. Through this
instrument, the Government are delivering on the levelling-up
agenda by making regulatory changes that support wine importers,
bottling plants and exporters across the country. From Accolade
Wines in Avonmouth and Kingsland in Manchester to Greencroft in
County Durham, we are removing a burdensome technical barrier to
trade. Defra will continue to work with the industry and across
government to ensure that we have the best possible regulatory
regime for wine. I beg to move.
of Hardington Mandeville
(LD)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for his time and that of his
officials in the briefing, as well as for his introduction to
this relatively straightforward instrument.
The Explanatory Memorandum gives clear detail. Paragraph 7.3
refers to wine that has been stored and appreciated in value, and
is then marketed later when it may not have the requisite
information details that we are introducing in this IS; the
Minister referred to this. Ensuring that this does not happen is
referred to, in the last sentence of paragraph 7.3,
“by amending the Wine Regulations 2011 (S.I. 2011/2936) and the
Food Information Regulations 2014 (S.I. 2014/1855).”
The Minister referred to those statutory instruments. However,
there is no indication of when this might happen. Can he say
whether a date has been given for that action?
Paragraph 7.8 gives details of the trade in wine with Northern
Ireland and the effect of the Northern Ireland protocol on the
wine industry. It makes the claim that, although the
instrument
“will be looked at again once those negotiations have been
concluded”,
there will be no
“significant effect on the trade in wine between Great Britain
and Northern Ireland.”
Is the Minister sure that there will be no significant effect?
The wording of the EM implies that there will be an effect but it
will not be significant. I know that this is straining at gnats,
but it would be helpful to have clarification.
Consultation with the industry, including the Wine and Spirit
Trade Association, WineGB, the Food Standards Agency and Food
Standards Scotland, has taken place. Not surprisingly, since the
VI-1 wine import certificates are to be abandoned and the process
simplified, there was general satisfaction in the process to be
instituted and followed. It will reduce costs, which is good for
business.
However, I am somewhat concerned that the consequent reduction in
the price of wine could lead to harm from increased alcoholism,
especially among young people, due to it being cheaper. Although
a glass of wine is an enjoyable thing for most adults, the
cheaper it is for those on low incomes, the more likely it is to
be tempting to consume more than is healthy. Addictions of all
type are a strain on the health service, and alcohol addiction
can lead to anti-social behaviour and violence. I am not
suggesting for one minute that the reduction in the price of wine
will lead to wholesale disorder on the streets, but it is a
consideration for young people.
The Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee has produced
information paragraphs on this SI, having consulted Defra. There
is a transition period, to which the Minister referred, of two
years for producers and wholesalers of wine, and until stocks
have been exhausted for retailers. Can the Minister say whether
an estimate has been made of how long it might be before stocks
of wine imported under the TCA before the lot codes came in might
be exhausted? Is it likely to be sooner than two years, or might
stocks be left at the end of the two years? If so, what
arrangements will be made to ensure that these wines can still be
marketed although they will not have the lot codes in place?
Lastly—I am sorry but this is a bee in my bonnet— I note that no
impact assessment was produced. It is clear from the EM that
there are likely to be impacts; it would have been helpful for
these to be gathered together in one place. Apart from these
minor comments, I am satisfied with this SI. I can see that it
will be very good for business and will improve the movement of
wine between GB and the EU, so I support it.
of Ullock (Lab)
My Lords, I, too, begin by thanking the Minister and his
officials for taking the time to meet me and the noble Baroness,
Lady Bakewell, to go through these amending regulations in
advance. It was very helpful. I also thank him for clearly
explaining the purpose of the detailed statutory instrument that
we are looking at. As he explained, these regulations will ensure
that the United Kingdom meets its legal obligations to implement
the provisions in Annexe 15 to the trade and co-operation
agreement, which deals with the trade in, and of, wine.
Specifically, they will amend rules concerning lot marking and
the import and export certification arrangements for wine
products, as well as putting in place the transitional marketing
arrangements, which are important.
However, I will concentrate on the removal of VI-1 certificates.
As we have heard, the instrument proposes changes to ensure that
wines from the EU and other third countries imported into GB will
not require a certificate and analysis report any more. Defra has
said that VI-1 certificates
“serve no purpose to business or the consumer, and simply add
unnecessary costs to the trade in wine.”
After considering options for the future of wine certification,
the Government announced on 25 July their intention to remove the
requirement for VI-1 certificates on all imported wine into Great
Britain, as the statutory instrument before us is intended to do.
We have heard that this measure is also likely to reduce costs
for our wine importers while increasing the global attractiveness
and competitiveness of the UK as a hub for the wine trade. We
understand that this change has been much welcomed by the wine
industry, which estimates that it will save it around £100
million every year, so we also support this statutory instrument
and welcome the changes it brings in.
We would also like to acknowledge the work of the Wine and Spirit
Trade Association, mentioned by the Minister, in pressing the
Government to alter their previous position. Noble Lords may
remember that that was initially just to roll over the European
Union rules and regulations on wine imports. It is very welcome
that the Government have listened to the industry and brought in
these changes.
Leaving the EU made a significant difference because the EU’s
rationale for bringing in an import document—effectively, a
technical barrier to trade—was, in reality, to protect its own
wine industry. Whatever our views on our departure from the
European Union, for us, as a net importer of wine, it made little
sense to maintain the rules designed to disadvantage our imports.
While I pay tribute to the UK’s many excellent wine producers, we
import more than 99% of the wine that we consume in this country,
and around half of those imports are from the EU.
Again, it is good that, following industry engagement, the UK
Government initially introduced a much-welcomed grace period for
VI-1 forms for all wine imported from EU countries, meaning that
the forms have never actually been required for EU wine imported
into the UK. That is why we now support the Government’s
intention to remove this documentation from 1 January next
year.
Having said all that, we have a few questions and concerns that I
want to draw to the Minister’s attention. First, there is the
impact on Northern Ireland, as raised by the noble Baroness, Lady
Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville. As we heard, the SI does not
extend to Northern Ireland, given the operation of the Northern
Ireland protocol and the ongoing UK-EU negotiations on it.
Paragraph 7.8 of the Explanatory Memorandum, which the noble
Baroness mentioned, says that relevant provisions will be brought
forward
“once those negotiations have been concluded.”
Does this mean that the Government have no intention to trigger
Article 16? If that is the case, why have the Government given
the impression that they might actually do so?
The Explanatory Memorandum continues:
“In the meantime, we do not anticipate this will have any
significant effect”—
as the noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell of Hardington Mandeville,
stressed—
“on trade in wine between Great Britain and Northern
Ireland.”
To me, this is all a bit unsatisfactory and unlikely. Can the
Minister tell us how that conclusion was reached? What
discussions took place with the Northern Ireland Executive before
that conclusion was reached? What engagement was there with
colleagues in the Irish Government in Dublin? As the noble
Baroness said when talking about the implications for Northern
Ireland, clarification in this area would be extremely
helpful.
17:15:00
I am also aware that the Government held a three-week
consultation on the proposals before us. In response to this
consultation, a particular concern was raised by the Alcohol
Health Alliance UK, or AHA, on the likelihood that removal of
import certification would reduce the cost of alcohol. It is
worried that this could increase alcohol harm, noting that the
price of alcohol is closely linked to harm: the more affordable
it is, the more alcohol is consumed, and therefore the more harm
is caused, as was also raised by the noble Baroness, Lady
Bakewell.
The AHA referenced the UK Health Security Agency evidence review
that encourages the reduction of alcohol affordability. The AHA
has urged the department to commit to producing an impact
assessment on how the removal of the VI-1 certificates will
affect alcohol harm and its associated costs. Does the Minister
acknowledge those concerns, what discussions has his department
had with the AHA to address them and are there any plans to
produce the requested impact assessment?
Transitions to trading arrangements have not always been easy
following Brexit, and Covid-19 has been hard on many businesses,
so I end by saying that it is good that the Government have
listened to the concerns of the wine industry in bringing forward
this SI, which we strongly support. I also hope that the Minister
is looking forward, as am I, to safely enjoying a few glasses of
wine at Christmas.
(Con)
I am very grateful to both noble Baronesses for their
contributions, questions and broad support for this measure. To
take the noble Baroness’s last point first, I wish the same on
everyone else over Christmas. I think we all deserve an extra
glass of wine—drunk in moderation, no doubt.
The noble Baroness, Lady Bakewell, asked when the provisions will
be introduced. It is intended that they will come into force on 1
January 2022, in a few weeks’ time. This will include the
provisions to amend the Wine Regulations 2011. Longer term, the
Government will consider consolidating and updating the Wine
Regulations 2011 as part of our general review of domestic wine
policy.
Both noble Baronesses asked about Northern Ireland, and quite
rightly so. The statutory instrument does not apply in Northern
Ireland, as they correctly pointed out, and will not result in
any changes to the certification of GB-produced wine sent to
Northern Ireland. Obviously, Northern Ireland will continue to
follow the rules for VI-1 certification set out in the protocol.
Most movements of GB wine to Northern Ireland have fallen within
the scheme for temporary agri-food movements to Northern Ireland,
and movements of GB wine to Northern Ireland are very small. They
often fall below the 100 litre de minimis requirements for a VI-1
certificate set out in EU law.
The noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, asked about the Northern Ireland
protocol. It is an absolute priority for the Government. She will
be aware of the negotiations that my noble friend is leading. We very much hope
that they will be successful and that the circumstances of the
Northern Ireland protocol, which must change, will be understood
and accepted on both sides. I cannot give her an up-to-date
assessment of those negotiations but it is very much hoped that
we can reach agreement without resort to any attempt to trigger
Article 16. That would be a failure of negotiation, and we are
working hard with our European partners. That is very relevant to
this, because it is a massive industry for France, Spain, Germany
and Italy, and we want to continue to have it here.
Both noble Baronesses asked about the impact of the measure. They
rightly raised concerns about the cost of wine and asked whether
that would have an impact on increased usage. Industry estimates
that the cost savings due to the removal of VI-1 certificates
would amount to around 10p per bottle of wine for an averagely
priced bottle of around £6. That would represent a saving of
approximately 1.7% of the retail price or 1% for a bottle of £10
wine.
However, this would most likely not trickle down to consumers. I
hope it does, but that is a matter for the trade. The Wine and
Spirit Trade Association pointed out in discussions today that
the marketplace is limited because of the cost of complying with
the VI-1 certificates; it costs about £350 every time you go to a
laboratory for analysis for the correct certification. The loss
of that cost will mean that a wider choice is available to the
public, but I hope everyone will agree that it is not a dramatic
reduction that is likely to impact on the wrong kind of alcohol
use.
The point on the impact assessment was very well made. The
primary objective of this instrument is to bring in measures to
enable the UK to implement the TCA, which has already been agreed
and ratified. The only aspect that goes beyond options set out in
the TCA is removing the requirement for wine imports from the
rest of the world to produce a VI-1 certificate. We accumulated
significant evidence that this decision would be widely welcomed
by the wine trade. The need to conduct an impact assessment was
deemed unnecessary, and this view was supported by the Department
of Health and Social Care.
The noble Baroness, Lady Hayman, made a general point about
supporting the wine industry. We are working closely with the
industry to promote English and Welsh wine. Defra is working
closely with the FCDO to ensure that Great British wines are
served at our embassies around the world and doing a lot to
promote what was in our lifetimes a nascent and very small
industry but is now developing extremely well. We want it to be
an option for land managers to look at new vineyards but also a
means of helping our exports.
I thank all noble Lords who have contributed to this debate. I
will look in Hansard to see whether there are some points I have
missed. In the meantime, I remind noble Lords of the positive
changes contained in this instrument. The regulatory changes we
are introducing enable us to meet our international obligations
and implement the 15th annexe of the TCA concerning the trade in
wine with the EU.
We have listened to the wine trade and your Lordships and have
removed the requirement for VI-1s, not only for our imports from
the EU but for those from other excellent wine-producing nations
across the world. I hope noble Lords will therefore agree that
this instrument is worthy of your Lordships’ support. I beg to
move.
Motion agreed.
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