Abstract
Highlights
► The aim of this paper is to analyse the development of the wine industry in Canada. ► There are variations in the way the industry develop in British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec. ► The development of an industry at the regional level is a complex process and, in the case of the wine industry, it is the various possible combinations of physical and human factors that will determine the distinctive features of its development in different places.
Abstract
This paper uses the cluster concept to explain the key factors of the development of wineries in Canada. First, we describe the salient features of the Canadian wine industry. Then we investigate the key factors of the emergence of the wine clusters in three different regions and discuss the structural and institutional problems hampering the development of the wine industry. Finally, differences across wine regions are discussed and assessed in relation to the cluster concept.
Acknowledgements
The first author would like to thank the Ministry of Research and Innovation in Ontario for funding this project. Comments and suggestions by the Editor, Scott Carson, the journal manager Kelly Manning, and the reviewers are greatly acknowledged. The usual disclaimers apply.
Notes
1 Tel.: +1 613 562 5800x8832; fax: +1 613 562 5164.
2 Local students will be trained years 1 and 2 at Nova Scotia Agricultural College and complete their bachelor degree at Brock University.