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SLOW FOOD MANIFESTO
FOR GOOD,CLEAN AND FAIR WINE
Wineries may not use chemically synthesized fertilizers, herbicides, or anti-botrytis fungicides.
A conscious and sustainable approach to the use of environmental resources in winemaking must be applied. Dependence on irrigation systems must be limited and should only been finalized to avoid critical water-stress conditions.
Winery buildings, should they need to be constructed, must respect their environmental surroundings. Management, upkeep and eventual restauration of extant buildings should take sustainability into account.
Wineries should not utilize techniques like reverse osmosis or other physical methods of must concentration. Furthermore, the addition of RCGM (rectified concentrated grape must) or sugar
(according to the country of production) is not permitted, with the exception of sparkling wines or wines where these practices fall under traditional techniques. Oak chips to aromatize wines are also prohibited from use.
Permitted levels of sulfites should not exceed the limits listed under the European Union’s regulations for organic wine.
The wines must show terroir and reflect their place of origin.
It is for this reason that we encourage the use of indigenous yeasts, as well as scientific research aimed at isolating native yeasts that can be replicated and then used by the winery or by various winemakers of the same area and geographical denomination.
The wines must be free of any winemaking defects, as they tend to homogenize the wines and stamp out any regional identity.
The winery should actively engage and collaborate with the entire surrounding farming community in order to strengthen and enhance the agricultural system of the area. In this vein, the winery must maintain a principled relationship with its associates, as well as its employees, fostering personal and professional growth. It is moreover important that the winery cooperates and shares knowledge with the other producers, avoiding unfair competition.
The sustainable winemaker encourages biodiversity through practices such as alternating the vineyard with hedges and wooded areas; a soil management that includes grass and green manure and excludes, in any case, bare soil, with eventually the exception for short seasonal periods; the protection of pollinating insects and useful fauna by using preferably insecticides allowed in organic farming when such interventions are necessary, and in any case avoiding their use during the flowering of the vine and other herbaceous species present in the vineyard; the breeding of animals in respect of their welfare and the production of manure on the farm; the farm production of compost from pruning residues and other organic materials.
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