Vine growing on remote Italian island gets UNESCO heritage status

Dec 2, 2014

(Decanter) - A grapevine growing technique handed down through centuries of generations on the island of Pantelleria after it was settled by the Phoenicians has been granted UNESCO World Heritage status.

Around 30 growers cultivate grapes from 'vite ad alberello' - translated as 'head-trained bush vines' - on the island of Pantelleria, 85km off the southern coast of mainland Italy and 70km from Tunisia.

It's a technique that is believed to have been first developed by the Phoenicians, who arrived on the island more than 2,500 years ago. The method is mainly used to produce Passito di Pantelleria, a sweet wine made from dried 'Zibibbo' grapes, also known as Muscat of Alexandria.

Last week, Pantelleria's practice of terraced bush vine planting was formally listed as part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, following a UNESCO meeting in Paris.

It joins several wine representatives on the United Nations' body's list, including St Emilion, Barolo vineyards and Georgia's traditional method of fermenting grapes in earthenware qvevri.

'We have been working towards this result for many years,' said Jose Rallo, owner of wine producer Donnefugata, which cultivates 68 hectares of vines on the remote island and makes Ben Rye Passito di Pantelleria. She estimated there were around 500ha in total.

'This listing will sustain not just this form of traditional viticulture but also preseve the local environment and the landscape,' Rallo told Decanter.com during the inaugural Decanter Shanghai Fine Wine Encounter last weekend.

She said the cost of maintaining the vines on Pantelleria is three times that of cultivating vines in her company's native Sicily.

Technique

According to the UNESCO application, the 'vite ad alberello' cultivation has three main phases. First, growers must dig a hollow, or 'conca', in the soil and plant the vine in the middle so that it is only a few centimetres above ground level.


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