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In 1987, a handful of Chamoson’s professional winegrowers formed
an association with the forward-looking name VITI 2000. Most of the founding
members had finished their studies only a few years earlier and were looking
to energize the region’s wine industry.
At that time — twenty years ago — industry
needs were different than they are now, and the level of technology used
in vineyards and wineries more closely resembled that of the 1960s than
current methods. Motivated by a passion for winegrowing, this group of
volunteers organized tastings and carried out studies of various vineyards,
of which Chamoson was among the first. The association inaugurated an
annual town exhibition and began collaborating with Regio Plus on projects
to promote sustainable development.
While the benefits of these initiatives quickly became apparent, the association’s
complete reliance on volunteer work became unsustainable as the founding
members grew older and there was a chronic shortage of new blood to replace
them. The idea of opening the association to all winegrowers in Chamoson,
as well as to wineries outside the commune, began to find approval among
members of the committee.
At the special meeting of VITI 2000 held in February 2000, it was clear
that the association needed to adopt a professional structure. At that
meeting, two people were appointed to study the issue and to develop a
plan to implement the organization’s vision of the future iwhile
building upon previous achievements.
The politico-economic situation has changed radically over the last ten
years. Chamoson used to be a self-contained system, but with vineyards
now selling for the price of gold, the import market becoming freer at
the end of the 1990s, the adoption of new rural financial laws, and increasingly
stiff competition for this traditional market from foreign wines, Chamoson
winegrowers have been forced to adapt or go under. The transition to a
free economy has not been without problems: marketing must now be on a
global scale, existing niches are saturated, and it is clear that the
number of factors to be considered in marketing grapes and wine has multiplied.
Winegrowing in Valais in general, and in Chamoson in particular, is unique
in the world. Nowhere else is such a small area of vineyards divided among
so many owners. There are 22,550 owners for 5,200 hectares of vineyards
in Valais, while Chamoson’s 428 hectares of vineyards belong to
1,120 owners, of which 400 are located outside the commune. This works
out to an average of 382 m2 per owner in Chamoson, the equivalent
of 100 toises, an ancient measure used in the region. The vineyards
are organized into 9,800 numbered plots and planted with 38 grape varieties.
This may give the impression that winemaking is well understood by everyone
in Chamoson, but such is not the case. Winegrowers here focus on their
vines and not on winemaking, and it would be an error to presume that
the rest of the population who do not own vineyards are sensitive to the
region’s winegrowing problems.
Globalization, changes in society and consumer habits, new means of communication,
development in other regions, and a new federal policy regarding the financing
of special projects have all forced winegrowers in Chamoson to rethink
their role in the new economy. Four years of active collaboration with
other players working with Regio Plus towards the overall development
of the region has opened exciting new avenues. It is clear to everyone
that winegrowing needs to co-operate more closely at all levels with other
economic sectors. Interdependence has grown significantly in recent years.
In this context, the right path for the future was clearly to replace
a self-centred association with a multipurpose foundation open to everyone.
Fondation l’Homme et le Vin was officially created in Chamoson
by a notarial act on February 1, 2005. VITI 2000 was the founding patron
and remains the funding agency.
Excerpts from the act:
ART. II GOAL OF THE FOUNDATION
The goal of the Foundation is to develop the culture of wine by informing
the public of the latest advances in all areas: technical, scientific,
historical, artistic, and epicurean appreciation.
The Foundation is responsible for encouraging conservation of the Chamoson
region, ensuring a continued quality of life for the population, and protecting
the region’s winegrowing zone by fostering sustainable development.
The Foundation is also responsible for developing a communications strategy
for increasing the appellation’s visibility nationally and internationally.
The Foundation is a non-profit organization with the same status as
a public utility.
ART. V ORGANIZATION
1) The Foundation Board shall comprise a minimum of three members and
a maximum of fifteen members. The Board is free to determine its own membership
subject to the provisions of paragraph 2 below. The first Foundation Board
shall be appointed by the founding members named in section III below.
The Foundation Board shall then elect and re-elect future members.
2) The majority of the members of the Foundation Board must come from
the association VITI 2000.
3) The Chairs of the standing committees listed in article VI shall be
ex-officio members of the Foundation Board.
4) Members of the Foundation Board shall serve a four-year term and are
eligible for re-election an unlimited number of times. The Chair is limited
to serving two consecutive four-year terms. If a member leaves the Foundation
Board before the end of his or her term, the member elected as a replacement
shall finish the term of his or her predecessor.
ART. VI BY-LAWS
At a minimum, the Foundation shall comprise at least the following standing
committees:
| A) |
A Wine and Health Committee, whose objective shall
be to prevent excessive consumption, promote the benefits of moderate
consumption, and fulfil other related responsibilities. |
| B) |
A Wine and History Committee, whose objective
shall be to research communal and cantonal archives to identify documents
containing useful information about the historical relationship the
inhabitants of Chamoson and Valais have had with wine, publish the
fruit of this research, and fulfil other related responsibilities. |
| C) |
A Wine and Art Committee, whose objective shall be
to organize art exhibitions and concerts in the context of events
and themes related to wine, encourage the creation of artistic and
musical works celebrating wine, and fulfil other related responsibilities. |
| D) |
A Grand Cru Committee, whose objective shall be to
establish a communal by-law setting out the qualifying requirements
for Grand Cru appellation status. |
| E) |
A Wine Tasting Committee, whose objective shall be
to encourage improvement in the quality of winemaking through comparative
tastings, provide financial and logistic support in the selection
of wines for submission to national and international competitions,
select wines representative of the terroir of Chamoson for publication
in a wine guide, and fulfil other related responsibilities. |
| F) |
A Tourism Committee, whose objective shall be to organize
events presenting each new vintage, promote wine-related walking,
restaurant and accommodation packages, identify sites and buildings
of touristic value, encourage the owners of these sites and buildings
to promote them, and fulfil other related responsibilities. |
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