Growers at winefest unite against climate change
Bordeaux: This is the wine industry’s new normal: heavy rains, floods, hailstones, drought and sometimes even frost.
Wine makers who once took great pleasure in competing against each other to offer the best wine on the market are now locked in a duel with Mother Nature to simply save the vines they manage to grow.
In just the past few years, rising temperatures have devastated crops in warmer climates worldwide.
Last year in Australia and Chile, for example, an unprecedented heatwave sparked forest fires and in France, one hailstorm nearly wiped out entire harvests in April.
Wine production in 2016 slumped to its lowest level in two decades, according to the International Organisation of Vine and Wine.
“The changes and the harm will get worse in the future no matter what action society takes, because of time lags in the climate system and the energy system,” John Holdren, professor of Environmental Science and Public Policy at Harvard University, said.
In an effort to save their livelihoods, vignerons have gathered at the prestigious Vinexpo in the world’s most storied wine region this week to hash out solutions to mitigate these climate challenges.
“The future harm will be much smaller if society takes strong remedial action than if it does not,” Holdren said.
The planet’s surface temperature has risen by about 1.1°C since the late 19th century, according to Nasa, intensifying the risk of bushfires and droughts, while altering rainfall patterns.
This has in turn affected wine’s harvesting seasons.
“Vines are very sensitive plants,” Gaia Gaja, coowner of leading Gaja Winery in Italy, said. “They’re like a thermometer. They register every little variation that there is around them.”
Winemakers have found that global warming can cause grapes to ripen earlier, which changes their sugar and acid levels, leading to lowerquality wines with higher alcohol content.
“We need big changes,” Miguel Torres, president of Spanish wine company Bodegas Torres, said during a news conference on the issue.
He suggested that wineproducing estates join together in a global grouping to try to counter the effects of climate change and encourage changes by other companies.
For some winemakers, these changes mean using lowtech approaches to delay harvesting times and increase soil moisture.
They are experimenting with pruning later or using grape varieties that take longer to ripen, or thrive in warmer climes or are resistant to drought. But these grapes are not yet ready to be turned into great wines, according to winemakers.
For others, the solution is as simple as reaching out to influencers to make them aware of the growing wine market problem.