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Sunday, November 4, 2007 12:08 AM CDT
The World In A Glass: Biofuel from wine; Vick’s vino misfortunes
With the price of oil reaching all-time highs, the European Union is looking toward alternative fuels and one of them is biofuel, made from biomass or anything living or dead that can be converted into fuel.

One company is making biofuel from wine that has not been sold and from grapes that are not good enough to be made into wine.

(Just think — the next time you drink some plonk, you have just deprived some EU citizen of some fuel.)

New Zealand wine scandal

The wine that won top prize in the Hawkes Bay Wine Awards in New Zealand recently was made by the company headed by the chief judge of the competition.

But, according to nzherald.co.nz, the judge, Tony Bish, said he was not involved in the judging that may have influenced the result. “As a judge he enforces the standards by which the wines are judged and is available for making decisions when judges’ opinions are split over any wine,” the Web site said. “Bish said … the possibility of a conflict of interest was discussed before the competition and steps were taken to avoid it.”

This is the second “scandal” to hit New Zealand wine competitions. Last year the chief judge at another event had to resign when it was learned that the wine he entered in the competition was different from the wines he produced commercially.

(Have you ever suspected that the wine you taste isn’t the same that get high scores from the critics?)

Michael Vick’s troubles

Problems continue to mount for Michael Vick. The embattled quarterback and a partner had invested in a wine shop and restaurant, and Wachovia Bank is suing the pair for $940,000 because they defaulted on a loan.

Atlantic Wine & Spirits and the adjoining Tasting Room restaurant in Atlanta were opened in March 2007, according to msnbc.com. The following month authorities raided Vick’s house in Virginia, found dogs and dogfighting equipment, and Vick’s troubles started.

(Apparently the business are still operating without Vick, so there’s no chance of a fire sale on any of the wines. But some of the wines may have a little bite.)

Prohibition hits India

Recent reports have indicated that India is a potentially large market for wine, but one state in that country, Haryana, has recently banned alcohol of all kinds, forcing a large brewery to close down.

While campaigning for election, the new chief minister promised to make it illegal to buy, sell, consume or produce alcohol in the state. He won, and 10 bottling plants will be closed, resulting in the loss of 20,000 jobs, and also affecting 40,000 truckers, farmers and bottle producers, according to dui.com.

It’s estimated to cost $142 million in revenues, which, the government said, will be made up by raising taxes and fees. According to the Web site, “supporters of prohibition said that the cost, no matter how high, is worth the price to try to save Indian families torn apart by … alcoholism.”

(And we think some of the state laws in the U.S. are bad.)

Quote of the week

“In Europe we thought of wine as something as healthy and normal as food and also a great giver of happiness and well being and delight. Drinking wine was not a snobbism nor a sign of sophistication nor a cult; it was as natural as eating and to me as necessary.”

— Ernest Hemingway

Jack Heeger can be reached at jheeger@napanews.com.

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