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Three Regions save Italian wine exports: the Centre-North drives the first quarter of 2024

Negative signs between January and March for major wine producers like Piedmont, Sicily, and Lombardy. Compensating for this are three regions from the Centre-North: Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, and Tuscany

The value of wine exported from Italy increased from January to March 2024 (despite a poor performance in the third month of the year). The over 1.8 billion euros for the quarter indicate a 3.9 percent growth over 2023, largely due to the contributions of certain regions. Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, and Tuscany performed particularly well in a difficult, complex, and fluctuating context, which also saw negative data from other major regions like Piedmont, Lombardy, Friuli Venezia Giulia, and Sicily. This indicates that the hoped-for recovery in 2024, after a challenging 2023 for the wine sector, is far from guaranteed.

Three key Regions in the Centre-North

Delving into the details, Veneto recorded 663 million euros in exports in three months, with a 5.7% increase over the corresponding quarter in 2023. Tuscany grew by 5.1%, and Emilia-Romagna increased by 10.8% to almost 111 million euros. According to Istat data, Trentino Alto Adige was also slightly positive, with 152.6 million euros in wine exports (+0.7%), as were Lazio (+1%), Abruzzo (+1.4%), and Sardinia (+2.4%). Notable for their percentage growth, though with very small specific weights (less than 1%), were Valle d'Aosta (+87%) and Molise (+43%).

Negative signs for Piedmont, Lombardy, and Sicily

Conversely, it was not a good period for other major regions significant for Italian wine exports. The case of Piedmont is exemplary: the second-largest exporter by value, thanks especially to Barolo, Gavi, Barbera, and Asti, saw almost a 2 percent decline in the first three months of 2024, losing its third place position to Tuscany. Also, Lombardy (-10.2%), Friuli Venezia Giulia (-4%), and Sicily (-6.8%) showed marked declines. Puglia remained stable (-0.2%), while Campania (-7.7%), Marche (-6.3%), Umbria (-14.6%), Liguria (-57.1%), and Calabria (-13.9%) all lost ground.

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