Wine Law

366 WINE LAW of the maintenance of different public registers and the procedure of registration would be much faster. In addition, there would be no need that various public authorities, in several public registers and in different ways and procedures register the same data that are important for the wine sector. It would also be useful to harmonise, as much as possible, the terminology in both legislation and in all public registers, so the data can be automatically linked and updated. The recommended approach would simplify the procedures for acquiring the right to use agricultural land for vine planting and would provide legal security. At present, the implementation of some of the proposed measures mostly depends on individual Member States particularly when the functions entrusted to vineyard registers are concerned (apart from those prescribed by the EU law). To what extent will it be necessary to stipulate in detail and possibly also unify their content, their maintenance and updating the contained data (because of increasing the efficiency of vineyard registers at the level of the European Union), primarily depends on the assessment whether the valid European organisation of vineyard registers contributes to the implementation of national support programmes and the schemes of authorisation for vine plantings and whether this contribution is satisfactory.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTE4NzM5Nw==