Climate Change in the
Vineyards: The Taste of Global Warming
Wine lovers take note: global warming is already
tinkering with your favorite indulgence.
A study of the world's top 27 wine regions temperatures
and wine quality over the past 50 years reveals that rising temperatures
have already impacted vintage quality. As for the next 50 years, climate
modeling for these same wine regions predicts a 2°C temperature rise
that is likely to make cool growing regions better producers of some
grape varieties, and already warm wine regions less hospitable for
viticulture.
The details of what rising temperatures and longer
growing seasons have done and are likely to do to wine quality were
presented by Southern Oregon University's Gregory Jones at the Geological
Society of America's annual meeting on Monday, November 3, in Seattle,
Washington. Jones worked on the study with Michael White of Utah State
University and Owen Cooper of the University of Colorado/NOAA Aeronomy
Lab.
"Grapes are a good indicator crop," explained
Jones regarding the broader applications of their wine-specific work.
“Because wine grapes are grown in temperate climates - what's called
a ‘Mediterranean’ climate - and wines are almost obsessively tasted
and rated for quality, wine grapes are a particularly good indicator
of changes that are probably effecting other crops in the same areas,”
said Jones.
Jones and his colleagues used records of Sotheby's
100-point vintage rating scale data (where wines scoring over 90 are
"excellent to superb" and under 40 are "disastrous")
along with climate records dating back to 1950 to look for trends
in wine quality or growing season temperatures. What they found was
an average temperature rise of 2°C rise over the past 50 years and
higher vintage ratings.
"There were no negative impacts," Jones
said of the apparent temperature rise in the world's most renowned
wine producing regions. Included in the study were five Southern Hemisphere
wine regions, including three in Australia, one in South Africa and
one in Chile.
While it is clear that improvements in grape growing
and winemaking technology have produced better wines, climate will
always be the wild card in determining year to year variations in
quality, said Jones. "If the climate is more conducive in general
or less variable, then higher quality should be easier to obtain."
To project into the future, Jones and his team used
the HadCM3 coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model (AOGCM)
developed at the Hadley Centre in the UK. It is a model that has been
used previously for predicting future agricultural conditions, according
to Jones.
Based on the modeling, the same top wine-growing
regions can expect another 2°C over the next 50 years. Does that mean
even finer wines? Not necessarily, believes Jones. Warmer temperatures
could mean that cool growing regions should ripen fruit more consistently
and should experience less year-to-year wine quality variability.
In addition, already warm wine-growing regions could experience challenges
in terms of overripe fruit, added water stress, and increases in diseases
and pests.
For example, Italy's famous Chianti region, which
already is very warm in the summer, could be hotter, making harvest
earlier during hotter periods and giving some pests more time to mount
an attack on the vineyards. On the other hand, the Rhine Valley region
in Germany could benefit with greater ripening potential, but might
eventually have to produce different wines in the changing climate.
On the other hand, warmer temperatures are already
allowing wine grapes to be grown at higher latitudes and elevations--places
that were once too cold. For instance, vineyards are on the rise in
southern England.
Along with the climate and grape-growing changes,
there are also bound to be some big shifts in thinking for people
of the wine growing regions, said Jones. "There is a huge historical
and cultural identity associated with wine producing regions. A region
known for a superb Merlot, for instance, might need to shift to another
kind of grape, changing the cultural identity that has developed over
centuries.”
“The bottom line,” said Jones, “is that growers need
to pay attention to what might be happening in terms of climate. In
the coming 20 to 30 years they may have to work to replace varieties
or change management strategies. Survival of today's wine regions
will depend on how well viticulturists adapt to and mitigate the effects
of climate change.”
California
Wine and Food Magazine
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