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Good Stuff Making good gains at Lawsonâs Dry Hills SOPHIE PREECE
WHEN LAWSONâS Dry Hills started investing in sustainability, plenty of eyebrows were raised about the cost, bother and bureaucracy. âBut the once sceptics are now champions,â says general manager Sion Barnsley, 10 years after the small wine company achieved its IS0 14001 international environmental standard. âIt brought real discipline around decision making, rather than just taking the easy option. And you see the benefits throughout the whole business as a result.â These days sustainability is simply part of Lawsonâs DNA, Sion told guests at the 2021 Cawthron Marlborough Environment Awards, where the company won the wine industry category, sponsored by Wine Marlborough. âItâs not something we need to police, because staff think through the process thoughtfully.â Awards judges noted that sustainability is ânot an add onâ at Lawsonâs Dry Hills. âIt is integral to managing their business, from growing the grapes to exporting the wine.â The judges were also impressed that sustainability decisions at Lawsonâs âsurvive the business evaluation test, even if not directly profit makingâ. Cost savings are weighed up against the right thing to do for the environment and to uphold the brand, they say in their report. âLawsonâs Dry
sustainableâ proudly printed on the front label. That move recognises the fact that consumers want to know the sustainable stories behind their wine and food, and plays to Lawsonâs strengths, with more than a decade spent reducing waste, water and power, while setting aside vineyard area for pastures, beehives, and native plantings. Sion says itâs increasingly easy to make the decision to be sustainable, with consumer and community buy-in to reduced emissions. But in the early days, Lawsonâs was moving well ahead of the curve, and the increased cost of âgoodâ business was harder to get past accountants. Fortunately, Sion was the accountant. He grew up in Marlboroughâs wine industry and was already linked to Lawsonâs, as his parents were growers and initial investors in the company, along with Ross and Barbara Lawson. His father, David Barnsley, started Winepress in 1991, and Sion recalls being tasked with the folding of the newsletter when he came home for visits. After leaving school, Sion went away to work in accounting and finance, coming back in March 2000 to join Lawsonâs Dry Hills as business manager, becoming general manager in 2009. He says the company was one of the first
âWe all have to manage the resource we have and we know how limited it is.â Sion Barnsley Hills donât have deep pockets or wealthy overseas funders, but they show how it is possible to invest in sustainability measures and be profitable.â Last year Lawsonâs installed 200 solar panels that supply 30% of the companyâs power needs, with payback expected within eight years. And last winter, in recognition of the burgeoning demand for lighter footprint wine, the company launched its Inviniti brand, with âcertified
24 / Winepress July 2021
to get on board with Sustainable Winegrowing New Zealand, but he believed they could do better than meeting those requirements, by using ISO14001 to bring more rigour to the measurement and reduction of environmental impacts. And the results are fairly remarkable, with continuing efficiencies, including a 30% drop in winery waste to landfill since the inception of ISO14001. Bottles are sourced from Visy in Auckland, with up to 60% recycled content, and