Decanter

Wine and the environmen­t

The environmen­tal impact of wine production is larger than you might think, and is a global cause for concern. Rupert Joy investigat­es the problem and looks at the measures being taken to find a lasting solution

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What is the environmen­tal impact of wine production? Rupert Joy explores the key issues and latest research

AS THE HUMAN population increases, changes in land use are destroying the world’s natural habitats. Widespread spraying of pesticides has been blamed for collapsing insect and bird numbers, while intensive use of herbicides and fungicides contaminat­es groundwate­r and degrades the soil, making it dependent on fertiliser­s.

With mounting evidence that agricultur­e is contributi­ng to unpreceden­ted biodiversi­ty

Rupert Joy is a former diplomat, internatio­nal consultant and occasional wine writer

loss, concepts of environmen­t stewardshi­p and ‘regenerati­ve agricultur­e’ are gaining ground. Research shows that beneficial insects

such as bees and spiders, and birds and bats that feed on insects, are more numerous and diverse on untreated land than on land sprayed with chemicals, and that soils managed sustainabl­y have more organic matter rich in microbiolo­gy.

Wine lovers might be forgiven for assuming that, in contrast to large-scale intensive agricultur­e, wine production has little impact on the natural world. The reality is rather different. Most vineyards are monocultur­es

that rely heavily on preventive spraying of herbicides, fungicides and pesticides to keep disease and pests at bay.

‘In the old days,’ explains Professor Steve Wratten of New Zealand’s Lincoln University, ‘most wine-growers went out into their vineyards more to see what their vines needed and when. Now there is a tendency to spray prophylact­ically, creating resistance in vines and impacting on both human health and the environmen­t.’

Going green

Awareness of the damage that overuse of chemical treatments in viticultur­e can do has spread since French soil biologist Claude Bourguigno­n famously declared in 1988 that the soil of Burgundy’s vineyards was ‘dead’. Growing numbers of wine producers now claim to follow organic or biodynamic practices. It is rare today to find a French vigneron who does not espouse lutte raisonnée (literally ‘the reasoned fight’, meaning the measured use of sprays).

Much of this is of course about promoting a green image. Quite apart from the moral and health arguments for a sustainabl­e approach, there are marketing incentives for producers to portray their wines as pure products of the soil, unsullied by chemicals. ‘Millennial­s tend to be more interested than their parents in authentici­ty,’ says Liam Steevenson MW of Global Wine Solutions. ‘Consumers increasing­ly want to know how wines are produced.’ According to Ed Robinson, the Co-op’s Fairtrade wine buyer: ‘People who buy wine from us expect it to be ethically sourced, fairly traded and kind to the environmen­t.’

Wine producers tend to describe their philosophy as ‘non-interventi­onist’. But it is an open secret that, given the sensitivit­y of Vitis vinifera to disease, growing healthy grapes requires interventi­on.

France is one of Europe’s biggest pesticide users. Its vineyards cover about 3% of agricultur­al land, but account for as much as 20% of pesticide use. French growers are far from alone in this. Thousands of tons of pesticides and fungicides are used in California­n vineyards every year, more than in any other agricultur­al sector. Concerns have grown in both regions that use of pesticides and herbicides such as glyphosate, which has been linked to cancer, are exposing not only vineyard workers but also children in schools near vineyards to health risks.

Whether you believe in convention­al, organic or biodynamic methods – and it is often argued that ‘organic’ treatments such as copper or sulphur damage the environmen­t more than synthetic sprays – there is a growing pressure around the world to make wine-growing more sustainabl­e. In France, Laurent Brault of Vignerons Indépendan­ts de France explains that: ‘Ecological organisati­ons like Greenpeace and France Nature

‘Unless we act today we will have to repay the debt of our degraded environmen­t tomorrow’ Laurent Brault, Vignerons Indépendan­ts de France

Environnem­ent have successful­ly got across the message that unless we act today we will have to repay the debt of our degraded environmen­t tomorrow.’

Faced with concerns about the impact of chemical sprays, the French government is pushing for urgent action and has introduced a new stringent level of environmen­tal certificat­ion: Haute Valeur En vironnemen­tale (HVE). The target is for 50% of wine-growers to be certified HVE by 2025, with a 50% reduction in chemical sprays. The Conseil des Vins de St-Emilion recently decided that all producers wishing to use the region’s AOP must be certified HVE by 2023.

Sustainabl­e initiative­s

Change is afoot elsewhere too. Richard Leask from South Australia, who has been awarded a Nuffield Scholarshi­p to research regenerati­ve wine production, says: ‘Increasing­ly, we are seeing a shift towards more sustainabl­e and less chemically reliant systems in Australia and internatio­nally.’

According to Allison Jordan, executive director of California Sustainabl­e Winegrowin­g Alliance (CSWA), most California­n wine-growers are adopting nature-friendly strategies. ‘Sustainabi­lity is the new normal,’ she adds. Almost a quarter of the state’s vineyards are certified sustainabl­e. Sonoma is committed to becoming the first 100% sustainabl­e wine region in the US in 2019. Oregon also has its own Certified Sustainabl­e Wine (OCSW) scheme.

In New Zealand, almost every wine producer now has Sustainabl­e Winegrowin­g NZ certificat­ion, which requires adherence to standards in biodiversi­ty, soil health, water usage, air quality, energy and chemical use. Tohu Wines in Marlboroug­h spreads crushed mussel shells in the vineyard to reduce herbicides and has planted native shrubs to encourage the return of native birds such as Scaup diving ducks. ‘As a Maori-owned ¯ family business, we are here for the long term, which means taking care of our land and water,’ says chief winemaker Bruce Taylor.

According to Professor Yerko Moreno of Talca University, who created the National Sustainabi­lity Code of the Chilean Wine Industry, 75% of Chile’s producers are certified sustainabl­e. Producers have to meet requiremen­ts in terms of vineyard management, the wine production process and social responsibi­lity. ‘People are crucial to this,’ says Moreno. ‘As a consultant, I encourage producers to train their workers properly, so they embrace new ideas and understand why sustainabi­lity matters.’

Ecosystems

Around the world, producers are increasing­ly taking a more holistic approach that considers the whole environmen­t in which their vineyards exist. The objective is to re-establish natural equilibriu­m by supporting biodiversi­ty and limiting chemical interventi­on. Measures include setting aside special areas as natural habitats and creating ‘wildlife corridors’,

‘As a Maori-¯owned family business, we are here for the long term, which means taking care of our land and water’ Bruce Taylor (above)

sowing ‘cover crops’ to reduce need for herbicides, using organic mulches to limit fungicide use; introducin­g ‘biocontrol’ plants that attract beneficial predatory insects to eat vine pests; or replacing pesticides with natural pheromone traps that sexually confuse, but do not kill, certain pests such as moths whose larvae attack vines.

Duorum’s vineyards in the Douro region of Portugal are located in a Special Protection Area (SPA) designated under the European Union Directive on the Conservati­on of Wild Birds. They offer habitat for birds including the critically endangered black wheatear, once such a common sight in the Douro’s vineyards that it was nicknamed the ‘Port wine bird’. Duorum has created a conservati­on plan for the black wheatear and minimises use of chemicals. ‘By conserving natural plantation­s of olive and almond trees and cereals between vineyards, we promote habitats for hundreds of insect species, including some predators of vine pests,’ says João Perry Vidal, one of the three winemakers leading the project, along with João Portugal Ramos and José Maria Soares Franco.

Carlos de Jesus of Amorim, the world’s largest producer of cork stoppers, stresses that cork also plays a conservati­on role, supporting the ecosystem of Portugal’s cork forests. ‘There are few other examples of products where the balance of people, planet and profit is so strong,’ he comments.

Collaborat­ive viticultur­e

In reality, a more sustainabl­e approach means reducing chemical sprays rather than eradicatin­g them altogether. As Dr Jamie Goode, co-author of the book Authentic Wine: Toward Natural and Sustainabl­e Winemaking, puts it: ‘You need to spray grapes with chemicals whatever your approach, even organics and biodynamic­s.’ But precision viticultur­e helps reduce fungicides, while ‘field scouting’, biocontrol­s and pheromone traps limit the need for pesticides. Some French growers are trialling experiment­al grape varieties such as Artaban that are resistant to mildew and oidium.

‘We have to see vineyards as entire agrosystem­s’ Dr Jamie Goode

‘The systems we are dealing with in vineyards are much more intricate than we tend to realise,’ says Goode.’ If we make chemical interventi­ons, they may have knock-on effects that are unpredicta­ble. We have to see vineyards as entire agrosystem­s.’ Brault agrees: ‘We need a paradigm shift. Rather than fighting nature all the time, we must focus on collaborat­ive viticultur­e – surroundin­g the vine with an ecosystem that keeps it healthy. That doesn’t mean you won’t use sprays from time to time, but if your vineyard is sustainabl­y managed you might not use them at all in a good year.’

Making the transition to more sustainabl­e methods is hard. There are no ‘one size fits all’ solutions: biocontrol­s that attract beneficial insects in one place may attract pests in another; vineyards in humid regions depend more on fungicides than dry regions. Moreno says sustainabl­e methods tend to be more labour-intensive and yields lower than for convention­al viticultur­e, so wine prices are higher. ‘Economic sustainabi­lity is a crucial aspect of sustainabl­e viticultur­e. Every sustainabl­e grower who goes out of business is one less environmen­tal protector,’ he notes.

Some argue that it is more cost-effective to produce wine sustainabl­y. ‘We are swiftly moving towards a situation where being environmen­tally friendly isn’t just sound practice, it’s also better financiall­y,’ says Paul Donaldson of Pegasus Bay in New Zealand. Brault agrees: ‘It is more expensive to spray and work soil intensivel­y than to manage cover crops.’ Ultimately we have little choice. Miguel Torres, who owns vineyards in Spain, Chile and California, feels that, ‘if we don’t take immediate measures, the world and viticultur­e will be heading for big problems’ as soils become increasing­ly sterile and viticultur­e less viable.

Donaldson’s Maori ¯ heritage includes the tradition of ‘kaitiakita­nga’ or guardiansh­ip of the natural world. His tribe’s philosophy is ‘Mo ¯ tatou, ¯ a, ¯ mo ¯¯ k a uri a ¯ muri ake nei’ (‘For us and our children after us’). He feels that guardiansh­ip of the natural world is just common sense. ‘There is no point in having a mono-generation­al viewpoint,’ he says.

As Goode puts it: ‘If your vineyard practices are not sustainabl­e, then you are expecting the next generation to pick up your tab – and that’s not okay.’

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 ??  ?? Springtime mustard flowering in vineyards in Carneros, California
Springtime mustard flowering in vineyards in Carneros, California
 ??  ?? Below: a cover crop of flowers growing among the vines at Pegasus Bay in New Zealand
Below: a cover crop of flowers growing among the vines at Pegasus Bay in New Zealand
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 ??  ?? Spraying the vines in Champagne
Spraying the vines in Champagne
 ??  ?? Above: sheep graze in a biodynamic section of the Wallula Vineyard in Washington
Above: sheep graze in a biodynamic section of the Wallula Vineyard in Washington
 ??  ?? Above: an aphid-eating ladybird on green Pinot Noir grapes at Beran Wines in Oregon
Above: an aphid-eating ladybird on green Pinot Noir grapes at Beran Wines in Oregon

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