Why Are Wineries Around the World Seeking This Certification?

Certificates of social and environmental responsibility, like B Corp status, have become important markers for wineries that place values front and center.

Grape growers and wine producers have long sought certifications testifying to their sustainable farming methods or their commitment to protecting the environment. They have taken great satisfaction in displaying their organic or biodynamic credentials. No less would be expected in a field that prides itself on offering a natural, agricultural product.

Far less attention has been paid over the years to how wineries treated the people who are doing the actual farming and production work. Itโ€™s been an enormous oversight, particularly as agricultural workers continue to beย prime targets for exploitation.

Just last yearย four workers died in Champagneย while harvesting grapes in extreme heat. French prosecutors in 2023 alsoย opened human trafficking investigationsย into companies supplying seasonal workers. Similar scandals have occurredย all over the agricultural worldย over the years.

Recognizing the long history of exploitation, and perhaps wanting to codify their social values along with their environmental and agricultural practices, a growing number of wine producers have sought certification demonstrating their commitment to what many call social sustainability.

These certifications can come from local wine-oriented organizations, likeย Napa Greenย in California,ย LIVEย in the Pacific Northwest,ย Equalitasย in Italy andย Haute Valeur Environnementaleย in France. Theย Regenerative Organicย certification has a social fairness requirement in addition to its agricultural standards. And more and more wineries are seekingย B Corp certificationย fromย B Lab, which promotes the notion that companies benefit by working for both profits and the social good.

Roughly 100 wineries worldwide have B Corp certification. They include significant names likeย Spottswoodeย in Napa Valley,ย Felton Roadย in New Zealand,ย Bollingerย andย Charles Heidsieckย in Champagne,ย Sokol Blosser,ย Stoller,ย Soterย andย Chehalemย in Oregon,ย Rathfinnyย andย Ridgeviewย in England,ย Avignonesiย in Tuscany,ย Benjamin Bridgeย in Nova Scotia and many more.

Among the most recent to receive certification isย Domaines Barons de Rothschild, the parent company of Chรขteau Lafite Rothschild and other estates in Bordeaux, Chablis, Languedoc, Chile, Argentina and China.

Why would a company as prestigious, as aristocratic, asย Lafite Rothschildย seek B Corp status?

โ€œWhen nature is the core of the product you produce, you have to have extremely strong convictions,โ€ said Saskia de Rothschild, who succeeded her father, ร‰ric de Rothschild, as chairman of the domaines in 2018 and chief executive of Lafite in 2021. โ€œHow can we put that at the core of what we are doing? B Corp seemed the most complete and exhaustive commitment to our environmental and social goals. We did it for all of our estates.โ€

Working in Bordeaux, particularly at a historic, celebrated place like Lafite Rothschild, she said, could be socially โ€œvery strange.โ€

โ€œHow can we keep to our philosophy, and make people feel part of a family of estates but make it professional rather than paternalistic?โ€ she said. โ€œOur business depends on balance โ€” in the wines, in our company, in nature.โ€

Achieving B Corp status is no easy thing. It requires a comprehensive analysis of how a company does business, with different standards for different industries. Wine producers are assessed for how they manage water and waste, for how harmonious their agricultural practices are with their particular environment, whether they promote biodiversity and how they manage their workforces.

That means analyzing the gender and racial diversity of a companyโ€™s employees as well as its income diversity. The average pay ratio of chief executive-to-worker among S&P 500 companies was 272-to-1 in 2022,ย according to the A.F.L.-C.I.O. Among B Corp companies, B Lab says, itโ€™s 6-to-1. Companies are also asked about their career-development programs, and how their organization relates to their local communities.

โ€œWe set standards, and companies must meet minimum thresholds,โ€ said Sarah Schwimmer, interim co-lead executive of B Lab, which began certifying companies in 2007. โ€œThey complete the assessment. We have analysts who verify. They ask for documentation and they may do site visits. Youโ€™ve got to really want it.โ€

Companies are given points in each area, and must achieve a minimum of 80 points to be awarded B Corp status. But thatโ€™s only the beginning. B Lab points out where companies can improve, and recommends steps toward making those changes. And companies are regularly reassessed.

โ€œIt really is like going to your doctor,โ€ said Alex Sokol Blosser, the second-generation president of Sokol Blosser in the Willamette Valley. โ€œYour doctor says, โ€˜You need to exercise more, and here are your options.โ€™ B Corp says, โ€˜You need to think about your team and your community in how you run your business, and hereโ€™s how you can do that.โ€™โ€

Sokol Blosser has been a B Corp since 2015. Mr. Sokol Blosser says it was a decision that followed the values instilled in him by his parents, Susan Sokol and Bill Blosser, who founded the winery in 1971.

โ€œIt resonated with my mom,โ€ he said. โ€œSheโ€™s a firm believer in theย triple bottom line,โ€ the sustainability measure that looks at three areas: people, planet and profitability. โ€œItโ€™s on every one of our labels. Weโ€™re proud of it.โ€

For Beth Novak, chief executive of Spottswoode in Napa Valley, B Corp status has been eye-opening.

โ€œThe process itself is amazing,โ€ she said. โ€œYou learn a lot. All sorts of things arise as youโ€™re answering questions, and, โ€˜Oh, I hadnโ€™t thought of that.โ€™ Weโ€™ve adopted many of them.โ€

She said the only drawback is that not enough people know about B Corp or what it stands for.

โ€œWe think thereโ€™s a way to operate thatโ€™s important,โ€ she said. โ€œOur whole ethic is around the natural environment and taking care of our people. The whole Milton Friedman thing aboutย maximizing shareholder valueย has not led us to a good place at all in terms of natural environment and workplace.โ€

Inevitably, when companies promote values that at one time might have seemed idealistic but have now become lightning rod political issues, like diversity, equity and inclusivity, antiracism, social justice and taking care of oneโ€™s environment and ecosystem โ€” all at the heart of B Labโ€™s ethos โ€” some sort of resistance might be expected.

Rainer Seitz, an associate professor of management at Linfield University in McMinnville, Ore., pointed to two recent examples,ย Targetย andย Bud Light, which have both dialed back vocal support for Pride Month after conservative backlash to their position on L.G.B.T.Q. issues.

โ€œCompanies have to ask themselves whether their stance is counterproductive,โ€ Dr. Seitz said. โ€œIs it central to who we are and to our values? What is the potential cost of doing this? Or not doing this? It is a brave stance to seek out and take on standards. Itโ€™s not for everyone.โ€

The bottom line, he said, is whether it makes good business sense. Apparently, it often does.

โ€œOrganizational justice โ€” if you treat people well and fairly at work โ€” lots of good things happen,โ€ Dr. Seitz said. โ€œThereโ€™s less turnover and higher productivity.โ€

For Napa Green, which has 90 certified wineries and 37 certified growers in Napa Valley, a commitment to racial and social justice is a core value, along with agricultural and workplace sustainability, said Anna Brittain, its executive director.

But promoting diversity is different from creating diversity. Leadership in wine remains overwhelmingly white and male. Yet Ms. Brittain believes wine has a crucial role to play in demonstrating that change can come.

โ€œWeโ€™re at the peak of the agricultural pyramid, so the leadership we show has much bigger reverberations,โ€ she said.

Akilah Cadet, an organizational and management consultant and author of โ€œWhite Supremacy Is All Around,โ€ works withย Diversity in Wine Leadership Forum, which supports initiatives to transform the wine industry. She applauds the accountability that certification requires but warns that, depending on the regulatory body, these certifications can often be performative. She ruesย the decline in D.E.I. effortsย that has come, she said, as people in charge want to feel comfortable again.

โ€œBeing comfortable typically excludes women,ย BIPOC, L.G.B.T.Q. and disabled communities not only as consumers but as experts or contributors to the wine industry,โ€ Dr. Cadet said. โ€œIt is time the wine industry moves away from fads and trends and realizes the future of wine is just as diverse as the grapes.โ€

Both Ms. Brittain of Napa Green and Ms. Schwimmer of B Corp assert that social sustainability not only makes companies work more cohesively, it appeals to the public, particularly to younger consumers, with whomย the wine world is strugglingย to broaden its appeal.

โ€œIt seems like a no-brainer,โ€ Ms. Brittain said. โ€œStudies all show consumers want to support values-driven industries.โ€

B Corpโ€™s own studies show that a majority of consumers agree that environmental and social certifications make a difference in their decisions. Charlotte Levitt, a B Corp representative, pointed to a report fromย Edelman Trust Barometer, a poll of 36,000 individuals, which concluded, โ€œSocietal leadership is now a core function of business.โ€

For Ms. Rothschild, itโ€™s just good business.

โ€œWine can be excluding and pretentious,โ€ she said. โ€œThe wine industry is super traditional. Itโ€™s opening the doors to different kinds of people.โ€

Eric Asimov, the chief wine critic of The Times since 2004, has been writing about wine, food and restaurants for more than 30 years.ย More about Eric Asimov

About napa green

About Napa Green: The Napa Green 501c3 is a global leader in sustainable winegrowing, setting the highest bar for sustainability and climate action in the wine industry. Napa Green facilitates whole system soil to bottle certification for wineries and vineyards, and provides the expertise, boots-on-the-ground support, and resources to continually improve. Learn more atย https://napagreen.org/participating-members/.

Anna Brittain
Napa Green
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