Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Bill would research effects of wildfire smoke on wine grapes

- By Maggie Angst

For five of the past six years, heavy smoke from nearby wildfires has engulfed vineyards full of grapes that Ashley Egelhoff depends on to produce her wine.

Though some wine drinkers may enjoy a little smokiness in their Zinfandel, too much can render a bottle kaput. When grapes are exposed to wildfire smoke, they soak it up like a sponge. That creates a condition known as smoke taint, which can make a glass of wine taste like it's been burned — or worse, served directly from an ashtray, according to vintners and researcher­s.

Egelhoff, the winemaker at Honig Vineyard & Winery, has been forced to forfeit entire vintages and sell wine in bulk rather than bottle it, curtailing the company's overall inventory and earnings. To limit the fallout, Egelhoff is using her own process to gauge the smoke exposure in her grapes.

Egelhoff's team ferments a small sample of grapes in a mason jar for three days and then performs a taste test. Depending on the level of smokiness, they'll decide whether or not the grapes are too damaged to meet the brand's standards.

“It gives us as winemakers a comfort level, but the problem is that we don't have a common language to communicat­e that to a grower and you can run into issues with insurance and contracts,” she said. “What we really need is a better screening method that allows everyone to be in agreement.”

As catastroph­ic wildfires become a norm across an extremely parched Golden State, vintners seeks answers to help the state's famed grape and wine industry sustain the effects of climate change. Specifical­ly, they're asking the state to invest in research to answer some of the industry's most pressing questions, including how to know which grapes have suffered damage, what level of harmful compounds can the grapes sustain before they become tainted and whether there are any ways to prevent smoke taint ahead of a wildfire.

“The industry is in urgent need of these answers,” said Noelle Cremers, director of environmen­tal and regulatory affairs for the Wine Institute. “Helping maintain the viability of the industry and not having these significan­t losses from wildfires is important for the state.”

Assemblywo­man Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, D-Winters, is hoping to help California vintners gain that clarity.

Aguiar-Curry has introduced Assembly Bill 54, which would require the state's Department of Food and Agricultur­e to fund research on smoke taint in wine, including methods to alleviate and prevent damage to grapes and finished wine. The bill requests that the Legislatur­e sets aside $5 million in the budget to create a new funding source for this research.

The bill marks AguiarCurr­y's second attempt at such legislatio­n. Last year, her proposal died in the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee.

“We're seeing those losses repeated with every new destructiv­e wildfire,” Aguiar-Curry said. “Our grape growers need to know how to prepare and mitigate. If we have more data tools and research, it helps us get in front of the problem.”

Some of that research already is taking place.

In 2021, a coalition of researcher­s at Oregon State University, Washington State University and UC Davis received a four-year, $7.65 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to study the impact of smoke exposure on grapes.

Anita Oberholste­r, one of the lead researcher­s, is training students to help examine grapes in Napa and Sonoma counties and analyze how much exposure to harmful compounds renders the grapes tainted. Although the federal grant may help answer some of the vintners' questions, it's not enough, she said, to cover them with the urgency deserved.

“When you divide (the grant) across three states and four years, then suddenly it's not that much money anymore,” Oberholste­r said. “It limits the amount of progress you can make.”

With more funding, Oberholste­r said they could expand their trials beyond the Napa and Sonoma region — and likely speed up the time it will take to find solutions for vintners.

“I know that there are a lot of very important issues out there but the wine and grape industry is an important one for California,” she said. “I think they deserve more attention.”

California produces more than 80% of the wine made in the U.S. The state's wine and grape sector contribute­s $73 billion annually to California's economy, according to a 2022 report commission­ed by the Wine Institute and the California Associatio­n of Winegrape Growers.

But the state's wine regions, known for their ideal grape-growing climates, are now routinely facing threats of wildfires.

Damage caused by fires in 2020 — when an unpreceden­ted burst of August lightning strikes sparked catastroph­ic wildfires across the state — cost California's wine industry as much as $3.7 billion, according to an estimate from former wine industry executive Jon Moramarco, owner of the market research company bw166.

The reintroduc­tion of Aguiar-Curry's bill comes as the state is eyeing a projected $22.5 billion budget deficit, which means any new funding request will be scrutinize­d closely. Even so, the assemblywo­man said she will be working hard to educate her colleagues on the industry's value and the importance of additional research.

“This industry employs thousands of people — the growers, producers, those trucking and shipping the products,” she said. “We want to help keep these people employed and give people the best quality products.”

“It gives us as winemakers a comfort level, but the problem is that we don't have a common language to communicat­e that to a grower and you can run into issues with insurance and contracts. What we really need is a better screening method that allows everyone to be in agreement.”

— Ashley Egelhoff, winemaker

 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE ?? Scorched grapes remain on the vines at Chateau Boswell, which was destroyed during the Glass fire, near St. Helena in Napa County in September 2020.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR. — THE SACRAMENTO BEE Scorched grapes remain on the vines at Chateau Boswell, which was destroyed during the Glass fire, near St. Helena in Napa County in September 2020.

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