All wines sold in France must be labeled with this circular tax mark, and those exported are not needed, because producers do not have to pay VAT for them. Sometimes there will be bottles with logos in China, because the wine merchants originally only wanted to sell them in France, but had no intention of exporting them. The producer has a quota to sell and export the same wine to France. If the foreign import negotiation is very big, then the producer may decide to extract some wine from his French quota for export. In Asia, especially in China, the import of French wine is growing rapidly, and the corresponding rated quota is a bit backward (China's wine market is prosperous and rich, so wine merchants are more willing to do business here, and it is a fool not to make money). Therefore, in the domestic market, French wines with taxes are still relatively common, which does not mean that there must be problems with their channels.
The numbers and letters on the outer ring of the circular tax payment label represent certain meanings, which are explained by specific diagrams: the numbers refer to the region where the place of origin is located, such as the postal code of Bordeaux, the capital of the region, is 33000, and the top number 33 is the gironde region where it is located. Three possible letters: r (ré coltante) brewing and bottling are all done in our own village; e(? Leveur) collect other people's fruits, brew and bottle; N(Négociant) collects the original wine, recreates it or directly bottles it. The last three digits 233 are the license number. Circular duty-paid labels are not only green, green is AOC and VDQS wines, blue is VDP and VDT wines, orange is natural liqueur or sweet wine, yellow is cognac and other wines, gray is fruit wine, and red is rum and other spirits.