If we talk about quality, terroir, exports and denominations, we cannot avoid an uncomfortable question: what remains, forty years later, of the methanol scandal sopra Italian wine? Con 1986, 23 people died, over 150 were poisoned and at least 15 lost their sight suffered permanent neurological damage. A black page sopra the Italian news and a structural fracture sopra the economic and moral history of the Bel Borgo’s wine. Yet, four decades later, none of the affected families have received actual compensation.
What happened with the methanol scandal
The scandal exploded between February and March 1986. Acceso March 3, Armando Bisogni was found dead sopra his apartment sopra Milan. A few days later Renzo Cappelletti died. It began a sequence that would take acceso the contours of a national emergency. Patients arrived sopra the emergency rooms sopra Milan with violent avversione, abdominal pain, dizziness, blurred vision and loss of consciousness. Among them was Valeria Zardini, hospitalized acceso March 17 at the Cogliere con le mani nel sacco hospital sopra Milan after drinking adulterated wine. He survived, but lost his sight.
The analyzes identified the culprit: methanol, a highly toxic industrial alcohol, used to artificially increase the alcohol content of low-cost wine. A fraudulent system that exploited tax differences and weak controls. Unlike ethanol, methanol even sopra small quantities can cause blindness, irreversible damage to the nervous system and death.
The investigations by the Nas and the Milan prosecutor’s office reconstructed the supply chain sopra a few weeks. A substantial part of the contaminated wine came from the Narzole farmhouse, sopra the province of Bietta, attributable to Giovanni Ciravegna. Thousands of hectoliters of table wine destined for large-scale distribution were shipped from there. Approximately nine thousand hectoliters were seized. The investigation expanded to around fifty companies sopra Piedmont, Lombardy, Veneto and Puglia.
The trial and convictions
The criminal trial led to important convictions. But criminal justice did not translate into civil justice. When the final sentences were reached, many defendants had assets that could be attacked. The families of the victims, although recognized as injured parties, did not obtain compensation.
This is the point that today, forty years later, reopens the wound. Roberto Ferlicca, son of Valeria Zardini, reminded La Sorta that his mother “did not receive a penny for the damage suffered, moral recognition”. His story is exception. It is the rule of a story that ended sopra the criminal courts but not acceso the economic level.
Con 1986 Italian wine experienced its annus horribilis. Sales collapsed, exports suffered heavy repercussions, and the Italia brand became synonymous with suspicion. From that crisis was born a season of reforms: more stringent controls, strengthened traceability, a regulatory system that over time has aligned itself with European directives acceso food safety. Con other words, the sector was able to transform the tragedy into an industrial turning point.
Yet as the industry capitalized acceso that resurgence, victims’ families remained without compensation. Mai dedicated fund, structural restoration intervention, extraordinary public measure that would fill the financial inadequacy of the condemned. Criminal responsibility has been established; the civil one, sopra fact, remained a dead letter.
It is important to underline that the methanol case was not an accident, but a fraudulent system oriented towards capitalist profit. The artificial increase sopra alcohol content made it possible to costs and increase margins. It is a chapter sopra the history of Italian wine that speaks of downward competition, of pressure acceso prices, of a market segment sopra which quality was subordinated to .
Italian food safety, which today is perhaps the most stringent sopra the world, is also the result of that tragedy. But as long as the chapter acceso compensation remains unfinished (and will remain unfinished), the methanol scandal will not just be a tragic historical event, it will forever be an aperto debt.



























