Uruguayan wine was produced in the quantity of 102,964 tonnes via 9,023 hectares (22,300 acres) of vineyards in 2023,[1] the fourth-greatest quantity in South America.[2]Uruguay is most known for red wines produced from Tannat grapes,[3][4] but white wines made from albariño are beginning to receive attention internationally.[5]
The modern wine industry in Uruguay dates back to 1870, and the wine industry was started by immigrants of mainly Basque and Italian origin.[6] In 1870, Tannat was introduced to the country by Don Pascual Harriague, a Basque.[3]
Albariño was introduced to Uruguay in 1954 by immigrants from A Coruña, in the Galician region of Spain.[7] When the Mercosur free trade association started to take shape in the late 1980s, Uruguay took steps to increase the quality of its wines and stepped up its marketing efforts, due to fear of being out-competed by Brazilian wines and Argentine wines, which had lower production costs.
There are two levels of classification for Uruguay wines:[6]
Vino de calidad preferente (VCP), a "quality wine" category. Wines must be made from Vitis vinifera varieties and are required to be sold in bottles of 75 cl or smaller.
Uruguay's wine regions correspond to its administrative regions. While the country's other forms of agriculture are grouped into cardinal-intercardinal-oriented zones, which are then further divided by departments, there has never been an official grouping of wine regions into the larger zones – based on publications released by the Ministry of Livestock, Agriculture, and Fish.