KEY POINTS
  • China’s central government has approved a 15-year wine development plan for Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region with a scale that could match the production levels of Bordeaux, France wine capital.
  • Last year, during the coronavirus pandemic, Ningxia's wine exports rose 46.4%, according to the local customs agency.
  • Still, Chinese producers have "got a long way to go before they become a big exporter," said Tony Battaglene, chief executive of Australian Grape and Wine.
A worker pours wine at a winery in Yinchuan, Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region in 2015.

BEIJING — Fresh off a surge in wine exports and a visit from President Xi Jinping last year, China wants to turn its primary wine-producing region of Ningxia into one that rivals France's Bordeaux.

By 2035, Ningxia's Helan Mountains area aims to produce 600 million bottles worth 20 billion yuan ($3.12 billion), according to a plan the central government approved in late May. The region along the Yellow River is about a two hours' flight west from Beijing and lies in a latitude similar to that of France's famed wine country.