
Pavel Shvets
Founder & Winemaker
After fifteen years as Russia's premier sommelier—champion, European semi-finalist, Forbes-list cellar consultant—Pavel Shvets walked away from Moscow to plant vines in Crimea. Seven years of zero revenue, birds that ate the harvest, and regulatory ruin after annexation followed. He survived all of it. So did fourteen wineries that didn't exist before him.
Transformation Arc
Pavel Shvets (Павел Швец) spent fifteen years becoming Russia’s preeminent wine authority—sommelier champion, European competition semi-finalist, consultant to Forbes-list collectors. Then he walked away from Moscow to plant vines in his native Crimea using methods most considered impractical. The gamble produced Russia’s first and only biodynamic winery, inspired fourteen other producers to follow, and established a wine region where none existed before. The winery’s name, Uppa, comes from the Crimean Tatar word for “mother”—taken from a local river near his vineyard. It was an apt choice for a man who returned to the earth that first shaped him.
We won't fix the road — you have to enter paradise on a donkey.
From Naval Academy to Wine Glass #
Born in Sevastopol on September 4, 1977, Pavel grew up in the city’s maritime culture—his father drove wine tanker trucks across Crimea, taking the young Pavel through every winery and cellar on the peninsula. The exposure proved formative, though the path there was circuitous. He initially followed the expected trajectory for young men in the naval city, enrolling at the Naval Academy in St. Petersburg. After two and a half years, he left. “At some point I understood that the form of relationships between a superior and subordinate in the navy wasn’t for me,” he later said.
He relocated to Moscow, completed hospitality training, and in 1996 joined the legendary restaurant Nostalji as an assistant sommelier—mentored by Igor Bukharov, one of Russia’s most respected restaurateurs. He was entering a profession that barely existed in Russia. Within four years, he had absorbed enough to enter its inaugural national competition.
Champion of a New Profession #
The 2000 Russian Sommelier Competition was more than a personal victory. By becoming Russia’s inaugural champion, Pavel helped legitimize wine service as a serious profession in a country where the role had no established tradition. The title opened doors to European competition, where he reached the semi-finals of the Trophée Ruinart—Best Sommelier of Europe—in both 2002 and 2004.
International exposure refined his palate and his conviction. In 2001, during a harvest visit to Burgundy, he saw small family estates producing wine from vine to bottle—a complete cycle from soil to cellar. Everything he had known in Russia was Soviet-era mega-factories producing volume by decree. The contrast was decisive. He returned convinced that Crimea’s limestone soils, which he had known since childhood, could produce something comparable—if someone was willing to attempt it with uncompromising methods.
Competing in Reims, the heart of Champagne country, meant tasting wines from biodynamic and organic estates. Pavel noticed something consistent about these bottles. They possessed a quality conventional wines rarely matched.
Building the Moscow Career #
Success in competition translated to commercial opportunity. Pavel co-founded Salon de Gusto, a Moscow wine restaurant serving the city’s new wealthy class. He established Bio Vain, an import company specializing in premium organic and biodynamic wines. His most lucrative work involved consulting for collectors—designing and stocking private wine cellars for clients whose names appeared on the Forbes Russia list.
By his mid-thirties, Pavel had achieved what few Russian wine professionals could claim: financial security, industry recognition, and regular access to the world’s finest wines. The comfortable path forward was clear. He chose a different direction.
Return to Crimea #
The decision to found a winery drew on accumulated observation. Fifteen years of tasting had convinced him that great wine required two elements: exceptional terroir and natural methods. Russia, he believed, had the first. No one had seriously attempted the second.
Crimea offered personal resonance and practical advantages. The peninsula’s wine history stretched back millennia, though Soviet collectivization had oriented production toward quantity. More importantly, Pavel knew the terrain—specifically, a village called Rodnoye in the Balaklava district, twenty kilometers from Sevastopol toward Yalta, at elevations between 350 and 450 meters on Tithonian limestone slopes.
When he sought advice on which varieties to plant, Russian agricultural scientists dismissed his ten-hectare plot as a “garden.” French experts cited appellation rules preventing advice. He eventually found guidance in Burgundy, at the Gouillaume nursery, which recommended specific varietals and clones suited to the limestone terroir.
In 2006, he established the company that would become Uppa Winery. Two years later, on April 17, 2008, the first vines went into the ground. He recruited fifty friends—sommeliers, wine journalists, business partners—from Moscow to help plant the vineyard over three days, digging twenty thousand holes by hand in ground he described as “simply hell” to clear.
The Seven-Year Silence #
From company founding to first bottle sold, Pavel generated zero wine revenue for seven years. The total investment reached approximately one million euros—entirely from personal savings, with no loans, no partners, no outside investors. “I have no rich parents, no credits or partners. I am the sole owner here,” he told Forbes Russia. The first three vintages were vinified at a borrowed facility under a borrowed license while he waited for his own production permit.
The ordeal deepened in summer 2012. Birds descended on his anticipated twenty-ton crop, leaving only one ton of Riesling and half a ton of Pinot Noir. “Birds ate the merlot,” he said. Every countermeasure failed—scarecrows, firecrackers, shooting. The birds were simply thirsty; a row of water buckets eventually solved what months of effort could not. The absurdity was instructive: the winery’s philosophy of observation over intervention, learned the hard way in the first years of production.
The first commercial vintage in 2013 validated the years of sacrifice. Uppa’s wines commanded prices among the highest in Russia, and demand immediately exceeded supply.
Regulatory Annihilation #
Six months after obtaining his own production license, Crimea was annexed by Russia. The timing could not have been worse. Federal alcohol Law No. 171—designed for industrial vodka factories—suddenly applied to his twelve-person estate. The law required online monitoring systems on every pipe and daily paper reports to Moscow. “Our small enterprise producing fifty tons of wine needs the same permits as a huge distillery. Survival will be impossible,” he told Decanter’s Andrew Jefford in March 2014.
Pavel spent the next five years traveling to government ministries, lobbying for a French-style appellation system that would protect small producers. The system he encountered gave appellation decisions to a Federal Self-Regulatory Organization where votes were proportional to vineyard size—meaning industrial giants controlling the majority of Sevastopol’s vineyards would write the rules for boutique estates. “I went to all agencies for five years and nothing changed. Zero results,” he told RBC Wine in 2025.
His response to institutional defeat was characteristically direct. He abandoned the “Chernaya River Valley” geographic brand he had been developing and wrote “PAVEL SHVETS” in large letters across every label. If the appellation system was captured by industrial interests, his personal reputation would become the appellation. The label itself became a declaration of independence—and arguably the most consequential branding decision of his career.
Uncompromising Standards #
The choice of biodynamic viticulture meant accepting constraints most Russian producers would reject. Yields would be lower. Labor would be intensive. Methods included cow manure-filled horns buried in winter, production timed to lunar and zodiacal cycles, wild yeast for fermentation, zero irrigation to force deep root development, and no synthetic chemicals from the first planting. When Russian scientists had dismissed his ten-hectare ambition as a “kitchen garden,” he had simply found better advisors. “Biodynamics is simply the path to achieve uniqueness,” he said in 2025. “You cannot replicate it, and that is the point.”
Organic certification arrived in 2021, making Uppa officially what it had practiced since planting: Russia’s first certified biodynamic winery. Consumer validation followed: Uppa carries a 4.0 average rating across nearly twelve thousand reviews on Vivino, placing it in the company of European estates that have built similar reputations over generations.
The distribution philosophy matched the production philosophy. No distributors, no retail partnerships, no discounting. Wines sold through branded stores, direct restaurant relationships, and the winery itself—at prices ranging from five thousand to nineteen thousand rubles per bottle, ten to twenty-five times the Crimean category average. The model demanded that quality alone drive reputation.
Regional Transformation #
The success proved replicable. Fourteen producers have since planted vineyards in the Rodnoye area, creating a wine district through imitation. Around 2022–2023, Pavel co-founded the Winemakers’ Commonwealth of Rodnoye, uniting eleven estates in pursuit of Russia’s first organic appellation. He formalized his influence further through the Association of Viticulturists and Winemakers of Sevastopol, serving as its council head in 2025.
His Terroir Sevastopol development project, initiated in 2018, grew to encompass forty-three participants, a 120-kilometer wine route, and more than ten billion rubles in non-budgetary investment, generating over five hundred new jobs. A project that began with one man’s conviction became a government-backed development priority attracting billions in investment across an entire region. In April 2025, Roskachestvo—Russia’s quality standards body—named his Riesling Oak the top organic wine in Russia across all categories. Three months later, the first dedicated wine salon showcasing Rodnoye producers convened in Nizhny Novgorod—evidence that a local movement had earned national reach.
His educational work extends the transformation further. The sommelier school he co-founded in 2015—originally WINE LAB, now School VKHOD—operates campuses in Moscow, Sevastopol, and St. Petersburg, training graduates now practicing in twenty-seven regions on a curriculum covering more than three hundred and fifty wines.
Legacy in Progress #
At forty-eight, Pavel remains the sole owner and active winemaker at Uppa. The estate operates with twelve employees, producing sixty thousand bottles annually—deliberately limited to maintain quality. The 2025 growing season brought the worst conditions in eighteen years: late spring frosts, a May hailstorm, and a four-month drought reduced the harvest to forty percent of expected yields, with some varieties losing ninety percent. He plans to spread the loss over several years of sales, raising prices on select wines in 2026. “I conquered this Everest,” he told RBC Wine. “But it’s hard to stop.”
His eldest daughter Anna worked as a sommelier at Uppa for three years and is now chief sommelier at a Moscow restaurant—the clearest signal of a possible next chapter for a brand that is literally his name on every label. No formal succession plan has been publicly discussed, but the institutions Pavel has built—the school, the association, the winemakers’ commonwealth pursuing Russia’s first organic appellation—suggest a legacy designed to outlast any single proprietor.
Western sanctions have limited international possibilities since 2014, but the domestic market absorbs everything Uppa produces. The larger legacy lies beyond any single estate. By proving that world-class wine could emerge from Russian soil through uncompromising methods, Pavel created a template other ambitious founders can follow—and a region to follow it in.
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