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FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDFOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDSEPTEMBER20211FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDINTRODUCTION41
?ORGANIC
VITICULTURE:CONTEXT,
DEFINITIONANDREGULATION51.11.21.3Principlesoforganicviticulture
5Regulationsonorganicproduction7Certi?cation
of
organic
viticultural
products72
?DISTRIBUTION
ANDEVOLUTIONOFORGANICVINEYARDS
102.12.22.3Methodology10Distributionandevolutionoftheworld’sorganicvineyards11Evolutionoforganicvineyardsbycountry132.3.1
Europe
132.3.2
Asia
162.3.3
NorthAmericaandSouthAmerica
172.3.4
Oceania
192.3.5
Africa
20SEPTEMBER20212FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDTable
of
?guresFigure
1.
Principlesoforganicvitiviniculture
accordingto
ResolutionOIV-ECO460-20126Figure
2.
Technicalprinciplesoforganicviticulture
andorganicwinemakingin
the
EUFigure
3.
Overview
ofregulatory
frameworkfororganiccerti?cationin
vitivi-6niculture7Figure
4.
Overview
ofthe
world’sorganicvineyards
in
2019Figure
5.
Evolutionofworldarea
underorganicvines1111Figure
6.
Shareoforganicviticulture
in
total
worldviticultureFigure
7.
Distributionofworldarea
underorganicvines
in
2019Figure
8.
Top
10countriesbyarea
underorganicvines
in
2019111212Figure9.
Top
10countriesbyarea
underorganicvines
as
%oftotal
area
undervines
in
201912Figure10.
Top
10countriesbyaverageannual
growth
rateofarea
underorga-nicvines
overthe
period
2014–201913Abbreviationsha:
hectareskha:
thousandsofhectaresSEPTEMBER20213FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDIntroductionOrganic
viticulture
is
a
production
method
that
underwentsigni?cant
expansion
at
the
end
of
the
20th
century
andhas
continued
to
grow
ever
since.
This
development
canbe
explained
in
large
part
by
societal
issues,
particularly
inrelation
to
consumer
health
and
environmental
protection.In
response,
there
has
been
a
surge
in
organic
vine
surfaceareas
across
the
world,
combined
with
a
strong
trend
towardscerti?cation.This
report
surveys
the
development
of
certi?ed
organicvineyard
areas
producing
wine
grapes,
table
grapes
andraisins,
covering
the
period
2005
to
2019
.
The
overall
objective1of
this
report
is
to
carry
out
exploratory
work
that
contributesto
knowledge
on
organic
viticulture,
a
production
methodused
in
the
vitivinicultural
industry.
It
will
then
be
possible,based
on
this
preliminary
study,
to
continue
to
monitor
andexplain
the
evolution
of
organically
cultivated
and
certi?edvineyard
areas
in
the
future
using
a
more
speci?c
approach,in
particular
by
separating
areas
under
vines
according
tothe
destination
of
the
grapes
produced.
A
speci?c
feature
ofthis
report
is
to
collect
and
collate
data
on
all
vineyard
areasconsidered
as
organic,
recognising
that
de?nitions
varyfromonecountry
to
another.This
report
is
divided
into
two
chapters.
The
?rst
chapterestablishes
a
general
framework
and
de?nes
the
principlesof
certi?ed
organic
vitiviniculture.
The
second
presents
dataon
certi?ed
organic
vine
surface
areas
by
country
and
at
theglobal
level
in
2019,
and
also
tracks
developments
over
a
15-yearperiod.1.
Formoreinformationonthemethodologyused,seeChapter2.1.SEPTEMBER20214FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARD1
?
ORGANICVITICULTURE:CONTEXT,
DEFINITIONANDREGULATION1.1Principlesof
organicviticultureBetween
the
19th
and
20th
centuries,
the
theorisation
of
organic
agriculture
emergedinternationally
from
a
series
of
scienti?c
and
political
contributions
in
reaction
to
theconsequences
of
agricultural
industrialisation.In
termsof
recognitionby
countries,the
global
pioneers
were
the
United
States
(state
of
Oregon
in1974
and
California
in1979)
and
France
(in
1983),
which
were
the
?rst
to
legislate
on
organic
agriculture
.1In
the
countries
which
are
now
in
the
European
Union
(EU),
marketing
throughcollective
brands
began
in
the
1960s,
but
recognition
by
the
public
authorities
onlyoccurred
in
1981,andthe
?rst
regulations
wereintroducedin
1991.In
1980,
the
International
Federation
of
Organic
Agriculture
(IFOAM),
founded
in
1972,formulated
the
?rst
version
of
the
IFOAM
Basic
Standards
(IBS),
which
are
reviewedevery
two
years.
The
IBS
serve
as
guidelines,
onthe
basis
ofwhich
public
and
privatestandard-settingbodies
can
developtheirspeci?corganicproductionstandards.Much
work
has
been
done,
and
is
still
being
done,
to
harmonise
the
de?nition
andpractices
of
organic
agriculture
at
the
international
level,
by
producer
federationsbut
also
by
governments
within
the
framework
of
multilateral
discussions
led
byintergovernmentalorganisations.The
?rst
intergovernmental
harmonisation
on
organic
agriculture
dates
back
to1999,
when
the
Codex
Alimentarius
Commission
adopted
the
Guidelines
for
theProduction,
Processing,
Labelling
and
Marketing
of
Organically
Produced
Foods
.2They
de?ne
organic
agriculture
as
a
holistic
production
management
system
thatavoids
the
use
of
synthetic
fertilisers
and
pesticides
and
genetically
modi?edorganisms;
minimises
pollution
of
air,
soil
and
water;
and
optimises
the
health
andproductivityofinterdependentcommunitiesofsoillife,plants,animals
andpeople.The
Codex
Alimentarius
Guidelines
provide
the
framework
for
an
agreed
approach
tothe
requirements
that
underpin
the
production
of
food
by
organic
methods,
as
well
asthe
labelling
andclaims
ofthese
products.Thefollowingprovisionsconcernproductindications:‘A
productwill
beregardedasbearing
indications
referring
to
organic
production
methods
where,
in
the
labellingor
claims,
including
advertising
material
or
commercial
documents,
the
product,or
its
ingredients,
is
described
by
the
terms
“organic”,
“biodynamic”,
“biological”,“ecological”,
or
words
of
similar
intent
including
diminutives
which,
in
the
countrywhere
the
product
is
placed
on
the
market,
suggests
to
the
purchaser
that
theproductorits
ingredients
wereobtained
accordingto
organicproductionmethods.’With
regard
to
the
vitivinicultural
sector,
discussions
within
the
OIV
concludedin
2012
with
the
adoption
of
the
resolution
on
the
General
Principles
of
OrganicVitiviniculture
(OIV-ECO
460-2012).
Theserecommendations,
illustrated
in
Figure
1,take
intoaccountthe
speci?citiesofthe
vitivinicultural
sector.1.
Morgera,E.,BullónCaro,C.andMarínDurán,G.(2012)Organicagricultureandthelaw.
Rome:FoodandAgricultureOrgani-zationoftheUnitedNations(FAOlegislativestudy,107).2.
CAC/GL32-1999,‘GuidelinesfortheProduction,Processing,LabellingandMarketingofOrganicallyProducedFoods’.SEPTEMBER20215FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDAccordingto
ResolutionOIV-ECO460-2012,organicvitivinicultureisaproductionsystemthat:?
Seeksto
maintain
ecosystemsandthe
fertility
ofsoilsin
the
longterm,?
Seeksto
increasebiodiversityandthe
protectionofnatural
resources,?
Seeksto
promotethe
useofecological
processesandcycles,?
Seeks
to
minimiseor
eliminateexternalinterventions
and
viticulturalpractices
thatrequire
theuseofchemicalsynthesis
products,?
Seeks
to
use
organic
products
and
processes
in
transformation
and
production
processes,trying
toavoidall
techniquesthat
haveaconsiderablenegativeimpactonthe
environment,?
Excludes
the
use
of
genetically
modi?ed
organisms
and
inputs
derived
from
genetically
modi?edorganisms.ProductionandtransformationofProtectionofecosystemsgrapesProphylaxisandreductionofSoilhealthandfertilityinterventionsReductionofsyntheticchemicalsBiodiversityandnaturalresourcesReductionoftechniqueswithnegativeimpactRespectforecologicalcyclesandprocessesExclusionofGMOsFigure1.
PrinciplesoforganicvitivinicultureaccordingtoResolutionOIV-ECO460-2012Under
Resolution
OIV-ECO
460-2012,
organic
viticulture
is
based
on
three
principles:
soil
fertility,maintaining
biodiversity,
and
pest
control
in
accordance
with
ecological
cycles
and
processes.
Theseprinciplescan
beappliedin
differentways.Figure
2showsthe
technicalprinciplesadoptedbytheEU
.1Organicwinemaking,whereregulations
exist,isbrokendownintopositivelistsofpermittedpracticesand
inputs,
as
shown
in
Figure
2.
This
production
method
therefore
requires
extra
vigilance
at
eachstage
of
the
production
or
transformation
process,
as
the
operator
has
access
to
a
reduced
number
ofsolutions
and
these
restrictions
may
leave
some
sensitivity
in
the
plant
or
processed
product.
Addition-ally,thismethodof
cultivationoftenleadstolower
yields,particularly
as
theonlypermitted
fertilisersareofnatural
ororganicorigin.OrganicviticultureOrganicwinemakingPermittedPermittedadditivesandprocessingaidstechniquesandSoilfertilityBiodiversitymaintenancePestcontroltreatmentsStimulatedManagementFungaldiseases:MechanicaltillageProphylaxis:anticipationConditionsofuseConcentrationlimitsbiologicalBioprotectionandreductionofcopperandConditionsactivityinputssulphurFigure2.
TechnicalprinciplesoforganicviticultureandorganicwinemakinginEU1.
CouncilRegulation(EC)No834/2007onorganicproductionandlabellingoforganicproductsandRegulation(EU)No203/2012onorganicwine.SEPTEMBER20216FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARD1.2Regulationson
organicproductionThe
principles
set
out
in
the
above
guidelines
or
standards
are
translated
into
regulations
on
organicagriculture,
ormorespeci?cally
organicvitiviniculture,
atnationalorsupra-nationallevel.Depending
on
the
country,
regulations
on
organic
production
may
set
rules
only
for
grape
production
inthe
vineyard,
ormay
extend
to
the
practices
and
products
permitted
forthe
processing
and
marketingoforganicviticulturalproducts.Regulationsandspeci?cationshaveevolvedconsiderablyover
the
lastfew
decades,
and
they
continue
to
do
so
in
order
to
specify
practices,
both
in
the
vineyard
and
in
theprocessingofvine
products.In2019,93countrieshadspeci?cregulationsfororganicagricultureand16wereintheprocessofdraftingsuch
regulations
.
Of
the
63
countries
surveyed
in
this
report,
56
have
regulations
for
the
production,1processing
and
labelling
of
organic
products,
and
7
are
in
the
process
of
drafting
and
implementingregulations
(Algeria,
Egypt,
Jordan,Kyrgyzstan,
NewZealand,
SouthAfrica
andUzbekistan).1.3Certi?cation
of
organic
viticultural
productsCerti?cation
assesses
the
conformity
of
the
production
method
of
organically
grown
grapes
or2grape
products.
It
is
a
way
of
guaranteeing
to
consumers
that
the
production
conditions
stipulatedinthe
speci?cations
have
been
complied
with
and
of
informing
them
of
the
approach
and
practices
ofproducers
through
recognisable
labels
and
logos.
Certi?cations
can
be
issued
for
a
single
referencestandard
ormaycombineseveraldependingonthe
export
destination.Figure3.
Overviewofregulatoryframeworkfororganiccerti?cationinvitiviniculture1.
AgenceBio,L’agriculturebiodanslemonde.Edition2019.2.
Certi?cationistheprocedurebywhichof?cialcerti?cationbodies,orof?ciallyrecognisedcerti?cationbodies,providewrittenorequivalentassurancethatfoodsorfoodcontrolsystemsconformtospeci?edrequirements.Certi?cationoffoodmay,
asappropriate,bebasedonarangeofinspectionactivities,whichmayincludecontinuouson-lineinspection,auditingofqualityassurancesystemsandexaminationof?nishedproducts,accordingtotheFAO(ALINORM04/27/18AppendixIII).SEPTEMBER20217FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDAs
organic
vitiviniculture
is
treated
differently
acrosstheworld’sgrape-producingcountries,somereferencestandards
are
technically
and
administratively
lessrestrictive
than
they
would
be
elsewhere,
which
hasresulted
in
a
strict
framework
governing
internationaltrade
in
such
products.
There
are
three
scenarioswhen
it
comes
to
exporting
organic
vitiviniculturalproducts
to
foreign
markets
and
labelling
a
productaccording
to
the
standards
of
the
destination
market:?Equivalencyagreement:atradeagreementbetweencountries,
whereby
the
country
of
destination
deemsthereference
standardof
the
countryof
origin
to
beequivalenttoitsown.Theseagreementsmaygrantfullequivalency
(e.g.
the
2015
Canada-Japan
agreement)or,
for
certain
products,
may
specify
particularconditions
that
are
more
stringent
than
nationalrequirements
(e.g.
the
2012
US-EU
agreement).?Mutualrecognitionagreement:intheabsence
of
of?cial
regulations,
an
importingcountry
can
recognise
the
exporting
country’sreference
standard
and
apply
an
acronym
orlogo
(e.g.
the
2018
EU-South
Africa
agreement).?Certi?cation
of
the
country
of
destination:
in
theabsence
of
an
agreement,
producers
must
havetheir
products
certi?ed
according
to
the
referencestandard
of
the
destination
country
and
apply
thecorrespondinglogo.SEPTEMBER20218FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDSEPTEMBER20219FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARD2
?
DISTRIBUTIONANDEVOLUTIONOFORGANICVINEYARDSThis
chapter
reports
on
the
?gures
measuring
certi?ed
organic
viticulture
worldwide,witha
focuson
how
theyhaveevolved
since2005.It
isdividedintoseveralsections.It
begins
with
a
description
of
the
methodology
for
data
collection
and
processing.It
then
discusses
the
evolution
of
certi?ed
organic
viticulture
at
the
global
level,before
describing
developments
in
the
world’s
major
grape-producing
countries.2.1MethodologyThis
report
considers
vineyard
surface
areas
only
in
countries
that
have
of?ciallyrecognised
Participatory
Guarantee
Systems
(PGS)
as
approved
certi?ers
.
In
order1to
capture
vineyard
surface
areas
that
meet
a
common
global
standard,
this
studytherefore
includes
only
those
areas
that
are
of?cially
certi?ed
as
organic
and
thusexcludes
other
environmental
approaches
that
do
not
strictly
comply
with
thespeci?cationsoforganicagriculture
.2The
areas
considered
in
this
report
represent,
for
the
majority
of
countries,
vineyardsthat
have
already
been
converted
to
organic
farming
as
well
as
those
that
are
in
theprocess
of
conversion.
Some
countries
make
no
distinction
between
the
two
typesofland
.3Data
on
certi?ed
organic
viticulture
was
collected
for
63
countries
over
the
2005–2019
period
and
was
used
to
obtain
the
total
and
the
global
distribution
?gures.
Note,however,
that
the
analysis
ofcerti?ed
organic
viticulture
and
howithas
developed
isbased
on
countries
with
at
least
1000
ha
of
organically
managed
vineyards
in
2019.It
is
also
important
to
point
out
that
many
countries,
identi?ed
later
in
this
report,do
not
collect
annual
surface
area
or
production
data
for
organic
vitiviniculture.
Thismay
lead
to
datasets
coming
from
different
sources
in
the
industry
and
thus
to
anunderestimationofthe
true
situation.Data
forthe
63countriesincludedcomesfromthe
followingsources:?
Of?cial
data
providedbyOIV
MemberStates
through
questionnaires
,4?
Of?cial
data
publishedbygovernmentalorintergovernmentalagencies(e.g.Eurostat),?
Non-of?cialdata
publishedbyorganisationsrepresentingthe
vitiviniculturalsectororthe
organicagriculture
sector(e.g.FiBL),?
Non-of?cialdata
fromothersources(e.g.presskits,
technical
journals,newspapers),?
OIV
estimates.The
surface
areas
and
variables
of
organic
production
are
thus
compared
with
thesurface
areas
and
variables
of
‘non-organic’
production.
This
latter
category
includesall
productionmethodsthat
arenotcerti?ed
as
organic.1.
Thisparticipatorycerti?cationbasedontransparencyisanalternativeapproachtothird-partycerti?cation.It
isadaptedtosmallanddiversi?edstructuresbyreducingthecostsofcerti?cationandthetimespentonadministrativemonitoring,andalsobyempoweringproducersandotherstakeholdersinthechainsincecerti?cationnolongerdependsonasingleauditor.PGSarerecognisedbynationalregulationsinanumberofgrape-producingcountries,includingBrazil,Chile,India,Mexico,PeruandUruguay.2.
Manycountrieshavedevelopedenvironmentallyfriendlyproductionsystemsthatdonotrefertoorganicfarming.Thisisthecaseforcollectiveapproachessuchas‘SustainableWinegrowingNewZealand’;‘NapaGreen,Certi?edSustainableWinegrowing’and‘SalmonSafe’intheUSA;‘SustainableWineofChile’;or‘IntegratedProductionofWine’inSouthAfrica.Forthesecountries,whichareoftenmajorwineproducers,thecerti?edorganicvineyardsurfaceareasincludedinthisreportarelowerthanexpec-ted.Thisisbecausesomeenvironmentalapproacheshavebeenexcludedastheydonotcorrespondpreciselytothede?nitionof‘organic’.3.
Australia,Canada,Chile,Egypt,Liechtenstein,Iran,Mexico,NewZealand,Switzerland,Uzbekistan,UruguayandtheUSA.4.
TheOIV’sgeneralprinciplesoforganicvitiviniculturewereusedasthebasisforthecountrycomparisonsinthisstudy.OIVMemberStateswereinvitedtoprovidedataonvineyardsurfaceareasthataremanagedaccordingtotheseprinciplesoforganicagricultureandcerti?ed.Certi?cationensuresthattheareasaremanagedincompliancewithregulations.SEPTEMBER202110FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARD2.2Distributionandevolutionof
theworld’s
organicvineyardsIn
2019,
a
total
of
63
countries
across
all
continents
were
involved
in
organic
viticulture
(Figure
4)and
the
certi?ed
organic
vineyard
surface
area
was
estimated
at
454
kha,
representing
6.2%
of
theworld’s
total
area
under
vines.
Although
the
map
in
Figure
4
clearly
shows
the
high
concentration
oforganic
vineyards
in
Europe,
this
production
method
is
also
gaining
ground
in
numerous
countriesacrossthe
othercontinents.Figure4.
Overviewoftheworld’sorganicvineyardsin2019The
rate
of
conversion
of
vineyards
to
organic
production
has
increased
considerably
since
thebeginning
ofthe
21st
century.Overthe
entireperiod
analysed
forthis
report
(2005–2019),the
certi?edorganic
vineyard
surface
area
increased
by
an
average
of
13%
per
year,
while
the
‘non-organic’
vineyardarea
decreased
by
an
average
of
0.4%
per
year
within
the
same
timeframe.
One
of
the
factors
explainingthis
intense
growth
rate
is
the
fact
that
certi?ed
organic
viticulture
is
still
a
recent
phenomenon.Furthermore,
it
is
evident
from
Figure
5
that
global
growth
is
divided
into
distinct
growth
periods.Organic
surface
areas
grew
exponentially
between
2005
and
2011
(+18%
per
year
on
average),
only
toslow
down
between
2011
and
2014
to
an
average
annual
rate
of
+4%.
From
2014
onwards,
the
growth
rateincreasedagain
to
an
averageof+8%peryear.Figure5.
EvolutionofworldareaunderorganicvinesFigure6.
ShareoforganicviticultureintotalworldviticultureSEPTEMBER202111FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDBehind
this
growth
in
the
world’s
organic
vineyards,
there
isnonetheless
signi?cant
movement
in
both
an
upwards
anddownwards
direction,
since
the
conversion
of
a
vineyardto
organic
cultivation
is
often
complex
and
requires
aconsiderable
amountof
adaptation.Weather
phenomena
orstructural
and/or
organisational
issues
may
drive
producersto
abandon
their
certi?cation
in
organic
production,resulting
in
a
local
decrease
in
organic
vineyard
areas.
Inaddition,
the
typically
lower
yields
in
organic
viticulture
canalso
be
a
reason
for
withdrawing
from
a
label
or
certi?cation.These
factors,
which
have
an
impact
on
the
surface
area,vary
greatlyfromone
country
toanotherdependingon
theweatherconditionsofthe
vintage.Greece
Argentina1%1%OtherCountries9%Austria1%Germany2%Spain27%China3%Turkey3%USA4%Italy24%France25%Figure7.
Distributionofworldareaunderorganicvinesin2019In
terms
of
the
distribution
of
organic
vineyards,
10
countries
account
for
91%
of
the
world
total.
Of
these
10
leadersin
organic
production
(Figures
7
and
8),
3
are
in
Europe:
Spain,
Italy
and
France
primarily
cultivate
wine
grapes
andaccount
for
75%
of
the
world’s
certi?ed
organic
vineyard
surface
area.
This
trio
is
followed
by
3
non-Europeancountries:
the
United
States
(4%),which
is
a
major
player
in
organic
viticulture,
with
its
surface
area
divided
acrossthe
production
of
wine
grapes,
table
grapes
and
raisins;
then
Turkey
(3%),which
produces
mainly
table
grapes
andraisins;
and
China
(3%),
which
cultivates
both
table
grapes
and
wine
grapes.
Finally,
Germany
(2%),
Austria
(1%),Greece
(1%)and
Argentina
(1%),
the
only
representative
from
South
America,
complete
the
top
10
of
organic
grape-growing
countries,with
vineyards
dedicatedmainly
to
the
productionofwine
grapes.Figure8.
Top10countriesbyareaunderorganicvinesin2019(kha)In
terms
of
the
weight
of
organic
vineyards
as
a
share
of
the
country’s
total
area
under
vines,
the
ranking
is1dominated
by
European
countries.
Italy
devotes
15%
of
its
vineyards
to
organic
viticulture,
followed
by
France(14%)
and
Austria
(14%).
The
only
non-European
country
inside
the
top
10
is
Mexico,
with
8%
of
its
vineyard
areacerti?ed
organic.15%14%14%13%9%8%8%5%5%5%ItalyFranceAustriaSpainSwitzerlandMexicoGermanyBulgariaGreeceCroatiaFigure9.
Top10countriesbyareaunderorganicvinesas%oftotalareaundervinesin20191.
Organicvineyardswithasurfaceareagreaterthanorequalto1000hain2019.SEPTEMBER202112FOCUSOIVTHEWORLDORGANICVINEYARDIf
we
look
at
the
average
annual
growth
rate
over
the
period
2014–2019,
the
ranking
of
the
top
10countries
changes
dramatically.
The
?ve
countries
with
the
highest
growth
rate
in
their
national1organic
vineyard
are
Egypt
(+36%/year),
South
Africa
(+30%/year),
Switzerland
(+15%/year),
France(+11%/year)
andTurkey(+10%/year).36%30%15%11%10%9%9%9%8%8%Figure10.
Top10countriesbyaverageannualgrowthrateofareaunderorganicvinesovertheperiod2014–20192.3
Evolutionof
organicvineyardsbycountryThis
section
outlines
relevant
aspects
pertaining
to
countries
considered
important
for
organicviticulture,eitherbecauseoftheexpanseoftheirorganicsurfaceareaorbecauseofnotabledevelopments.For
eachofthese
countries,key?gures
onsurface
area
andchanging
trendsarepresented.2.3.1EuropeCerti?ed
organicvineyards
arehighly
concentratedin
Europe,whichin
2019accountedfor381kha,
or84%ofthe
world’stotal
certi?ed
organicvineyard
surface
area.WithintheEuropeanUnion
(EU)Certain
EU
policies
have
encouraged
the
development
of
organic
areas,
particularly
vineyards.
Inthe
EU,
the
development
of
organic
vitiviniculture
is
provided
for
in
the
second
pillar
of
the
CommonAgricultural
Policy(CAP),whichhas
contributedto
the
expansionofEurope’sorganicsurface
areas
.2In
2019,
Spain
was
the
world’s
leading
organic
producer
by
area
underOrganic
Vineyard
Evolutionvines
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