Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc accounts for roughly 70% of New Zealand's wine exports by volume. It is the country's most recognised wine style internationally, and the Marlborough GI carries significant commercial weight in markets from the UK to the United States. That weight comes with responsibility: every bottle carrying the Marlborough designation must be traceable to its origin.
The GI Compliance Reality
Under New Zealand's Wine Act 2003, wines labelled with a Geographical Indication must contain at least 85% fruit from the designated region. For Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc — where the regional claim is central to the product's market positioning — this is not a technicality. It is the foundation of the brand promise.
Demonstrating GI compliance requires documentation that traces each lot from grape intake through fermentation, blending, and bottling. When a wine is blended from multiple vineyard sources across the Wairau and Awatere valleys, maintaining accurate origin percentages across every production step is essential.
Where Traceability Breaks Down
The common failure points are predictable. Grape intake records that do not specify sub-regional origin. Blend calculations performed manually in spreadsheets with no audit trail. Bottling records that reference tank numbers but not the lot composition in those tanks at the time of bottling.
Any of these gaps can create problems during an MPI audit or when an export market requests documentation supporting a label claim. The cost of a traceability failure — relabelling, re-documentation, or in the worst case, product withdrawal — far exceeds the cost of maintaining proper records.
What Effective Traceability Looks Like
For a Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc producer, vineyard-to-bottle traceability means:
- Intake records tied to specific growers, vineyards, and GI designations
- Fermentation batch tracking that preserves origin and variety data from intake through to finished wine
- Blend management that automatically calculates GI and varietal percentages based on component lot histories
- Bottling documentation that captures the exact composition of the wine at the point of packaging
- Export certificates generated directly from production data, not assembled manually
The Premium Market Advantage
Beyond compliance, traceability is becoming a commercial differentiator. UK and US importers are increasingly asking for detailed provenance documentation — not just origin certificates, but vineyard-level data, harvest dates, and production chain records.
Producers who can provide this information instantly, from a digital system rather than a filing cabinet, signal professionalism and reliability to their trade partners. In a category as competitive as Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc, where hundreds of producers compete for shelf space, this operational capability translates to commercial advantage.
Platforms like Cepaos maintain the complete production chain from grape weighbridge to export documentation, ensuring that every Marlborough label claim is backed by auditable, accessible data.
Protecting the Marlborough Name
Marlborough's reputation is a collective asset. Every producer that maintains rigorous traceability helps protect the integrity of the regional brand. The investment in proper production records is not just an individual compliance exercise — it is a contribution to the long-term value of the GI that benefits every winery in the region.