Sustainability in hungarian viticulture economic sustainability of vine growing farms in Hungary
In our globalised world, humankind is increasingly realising that we have consumed the Earth’s resources, and it is necessary to change our own mind and attitude. Economic, social and ecological sustainability has become a fundamental goal in every sector, including vine and wine growing. Hungary is...
Saved in:
Published in | Review on Agriculture and Rural Development Vol. 12; no. 1-2; pp. 95 - 106 |
---|---|
Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
12.12.2023
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2063-4803 2677-0792 |
DOI | 10.14232/rard.2023.1-2.95-106 |
Cover
Summary: | In our globalised world, humankind is increasingly realising that we
have consumed the Earth’s resources, and it is necessary to change our own
mind and attitude. Economic, social and ecological sustainability has
become a fundamental goal in every sector, including vine and wine growing.
Hungary is ranked 16th and 7th in the wine growing of the world and the
European Union respectively (OIV 2022 forecast). Thus, global goals need to
be increasingly enforced also in this sector in order to be able to keep
our competitiveness. Markets are becoming more and more concentrated. New
World countries are developing exponentially. So tradition and expertise
are no longer enough to maintain and develop the sector. There is a need
for collaborations and integrations, for which cooperatives and clusters
serve as a model most of all. Since, however, their implementation is
difficult in Hungary, it is necessary to put more emphasis on scale
efficiency, cost minimization and sustainability. The latter one represents
higher customer added value and meets the demand of conscious consumers.
This study is intended to deal with costs and buying-in prices by farm
sizes, and to show which sizes may be economically sustainable. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 2063-4803 2677-0792 |
DOI: | 10.14232/rard.2023.1-2.95-106 |