Friday, 15 February 2013

Scotland, Independence, and Whisky

On the 15th of October 2012, the Edinburgh Agreement between the United Kingdom Government and Scottish Government on a referendum on independence for Scotland was signed. The political process continues, and before the end of 2014, the electorate (with a lowered voting age from 18 to 16) gets to give a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ vote to the question ‘Should Scotland be an independent country?’. What, then, are the implications of a possible Scottish independence for Scotch whisky?

Scotch whisky is Scotland’s leading single product export, and the UK’s largest FMCG export. Diageo, the biggest player on the field, is investing £ 1.000.000.000 in Scotch whisky production over the next five years. According to BBC, the company’s CEO Paul Walsh has stated that Scottish independence would make no difference to any decision on investing in the country, and that such moves are only made for economic reasons. Walsh also stated that Diageo has a very good relationship with both Holyrood and Westminster, and that he doesn’t think the debate over independence is one Diageo wishes to get into.

A similarly neutral line is taken by The Scotch Whisky Association in its written evidence to the UK Parliament on the foreign policy implications of and for a separate Scotland. The SWA takes no official position on constitutional arrangements within the UK. However, it could be argued that in its written evidence and in its response to the UK and Scottish Governments’ consultations, worries over changing the devolution-based status quo are visible at least beneath the surface.

The SWA points out that the Scotch whisky industry is a major business in the UK, embedded in Scotland, providing employment for around 35.000 people, and contributing massively to the prosperity of the United Kingdom and Scotland. It is also an export-oriented industry, selling nine out of every ten bottles overseas. This leads to various international priorities, which the SWA says are pursued with and through the UK Government whose influence with the European Union institutions ensures that they are handled to the best effect. The existing and apparently very well-working UK framework is analysed with seven paragraphs, whereas the Scottish framework gets only one, its main content seeming to be that the SWA aims to keep the Scottish Government and public agencies updated on industry trade policy priorities.

In late January 2012, British Foreign Secretary William Hague reportedly said in a private meeting that Scotch whisky would be hit by a Foreign Office ban if Scotland breaks away from the UK. According to Hague, Britain’s 140 embassies and high commissions promote whisky for free, but if Scotland becomes independent, Edinburgh would have to take over the job and pay for it. While it might be thought that Hague was merely stating the obvious, with some rhetoric added for dramatic effect, the possibility of diminished promotional resources on an international level seems like a legitimate cause for worry for any export-oriented industry.

The SWA has just held (from 29 November 2012 to 25 January 2013) a ‘From Grain to Glass’ exhibition at the Scottish Parliament to celebrate the Association’s first century. However, the feeling of uncertainty at the prospect of independency with Holyrood might be somewhat intensified by the ongoing disagreement over the principle of minimum alcohol unit pricing between the Scottish Government and the SWA. The latter opposes minimum pricing as damaging to the industry, and has also proceeded to question its legality. The Scottish Government’s expressed aim, on the other hand, is to reduce alcohol harm factors related with health, crime, social care, productive capacity, and wider social costs.

Wherever the constitutional destiny of Scotland may lie at the hands of the electorate in 2014, interested observers may only urge and hope that the political and industrial parties involved possess enough wisdom to steer a sustainable course that continues to take good care of Scotland’s valuable whisky tradition in a way which is also socially responsible.



Monday, 4 February 2013

UISGE 2013 Festival in Helsinki


The Old Student House in Helsinki provided a magnificent venue for the third Finnish UISGE festival organized as a two-day event at the turn of January and February. In the building’s Great Hall and Stage, one could spend two very enjoyable evenings mingling with people sharing an interest in the water of life, and sampling from a selection of two hundred different bottlings. In addition to such floor activities, twenty expertly guided tastings were also arranged in the smaller rooms above.


Festival banners at the entrance



An overview of the Great Hall








The credit for both the original idea and the actual organization of the festival belongs to Mika Jansson and Ilkka Ruponen, who first started developing the very notion of a Finnish whisky festival back in the spring of 2010. The first UISGE 2011 was organized in Gallows Bird, a restaurant in Helsinki’s neighbouring Espoo. The festival turned out to be so popular that a larger venue was definitely needed. The Old Student House situated at the centre of Helsinki then proved to be a very suitable location indeed.