Georgia Today reports that the Georgian government has submitted amendments to tighten wine regulation, including mandatory organoleptic testing for all wine categories sold both domestically and for export, plus a paid bottle-labelling system that officials expect could generate €14 million to €15 million a year for the National Wine Agency. The proposal is notable because it combines stricter quality oversight with a financial and structural shake-up, lowering the threshold for “small cellar” status from 40,000 litres to 25,000 litres, affecting around 50 producers directly while leaving about 550 small cellars exempt, and adding new definitions such as “natural wine” while dropping the term “home wine”.