Will Lyons had an excellent piece in Scotland on Sunday on the issues with the SWA's move to introduce "Blended Malt" into the world's whisky lexicon.
Originally printed Sunday, March 30th, 2008
Scotland on Sunday
Blend fury
By William Lyons
A
NEW row threatens to split the whisky industry as small distilleries
accuse the big boys of confusing consumers and undermining single
malts, writes William Lyons.
A
SHORT drive from Dufftown, high above the River Spey, lies Cardhu
single malt distillery. The jewel in Diageo's crown has been out of the
public eye since the infamous "pure malt" controversy threatened to
split the industry. But this week, as the six stills rumble away to
produce the main spirit for Johnnie Walker, echoes of the dispute are
being heard once again in a new row over the future of Scotch.
It's
been four years since the £2.5bn industry almost ripped itself apart
over the Cardhu affair when the Grant family, owner of Glenfiddich, one
of Speyside's most powerful brands, roused the industry into forcing
Diageo to withdraw the pure malt blend.
As the last cases were
removed from the European market an uneasy calm settled over the whisky
industry. As one insider said at the time: "The tanks are on the lawn
but for now we have turned the engines off."
Those engines are
about to be turned back on, albeit from a different source. This time
it is the small distilleries that are leading the fight. With talk of
the big distillers throwing their weight around, the Scotch Whisky
Association (SWA) steam-rolling through unpopular measures, and deals
being "conducted among an old boys' network", the atmosphere has once
again turned sour. As one prominent distiller remarked to this
newspaper: "The Cardhu debacle which everyone thought had gone away,
has not. Nothing has changed."
The vortex of this latest row is
the new category "blended malt whisky", ironically the definition
created to placate those who objected so strongly to Diageo's
inflammatory invention.