International Organisation of Vine and Wine explained

International Organisation of
Vine and Wine
Native Name:Organisation Internationale de
la vigne et du vin
Native Name Lang:fr
Map:Organisation internationale vigne vin 2011.svg
Abbreviation:OIV
Predecessor:International Vine and Wine Office
Type:Intergovernmental organisation
Headquarters:12 Parvis de l'Unesco, Dijon, France
Fields:Winemaking, viticulture
Membership:49 states
Leader Title:Director General
Leader Name:Pau Roca
Main Organ:OIV General Assembly

The International Organisation of Vine and Wine (French: Organisation Internationale de la vigne et du vin; OIV) is an intergovernmental organization which deals with technical and scientific aspects of viticulture and winemaking.[1] The field of OIV includes grape production for all purposes, i.e. not just wine, but also table grapes and raisin production.

One of the activities of OIV is the compilation of global statistics within its field.

OIV is based in Dijon, and had 49 member states as of 2022.[2] [3]

History

The earliest forerunners of the OIV are the international conferences held as a reaction to the 19th century phylloxera epidemic, with the five-nation Montpellier Congress held between 26 and 30 October 1874 being the foremost among these.[4] The idea of an international organization came up several times during the coming decades, and finally, on 29 November 1924, eight nations signed an agreement concerned with the creation of an International Wine Office (Office international du vin, OIV) in Paris. After that the agreement went back to nations for ratification. The first working session was held at Salon de l’Horloge on 3 December 1927. On 4 September 1958, the organization's name was changed to the International Vine and Wine Office (Office International de la Vigne et du Vin).

The current International Organisation of Vine and Wine was established following a 35-nation agreement on 3 April 2001, and replaced the International Vine and Wine Office. This agreement went into effect on 1 January 2004.[3]

Scientific wine color determination

The International Organisation of Vine and Wine provides methods to assess the color of a wine using a spectrophotometer and the calculation of indices in the Lab color space.[5]

Resolutions

In 2013, the OIV took a resolution which "recommends obtaining and developing new cultivars which carry multiple resistance loci [...] to lower the risk of selection and of development of more aggressive pathogen strains", especially for downy and powdery mildew.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.oiv.int/oiv/info/enpresentation OIV - Presentation
  2. Web site: Ukraine, new OIV Member State . International Organisation of Vine and Wine . 2022-10-27 . 2022-10-29 . en.
  3. http://www.oiv.int/oiv/info/enmembresobservateurs?lang=en OIV members
  4. http://www.oiv.int/oiv/info/enhistorique OIV - Background
  5. http://www.fho-emden.de/~hoffmann/cielab03022003.pdf CIELab Color Space
  6. Web site: Resolution OIV-VITI 515-2013: Stability of disease resistance in new cultivars by combining resistance loci . Federico Castelluci, General Director of the OIV, Secretary of the General Assembly . 2013-06-07 . oiv.int/ . 2014-10-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141025114656/http://www.oiv.int/oiv/files/OIV-VITI_515-2013_EN.pdf . 2014-10-25 . dead .