Climate
change will threaten wine production, study shows
Global
warming will make it difficult to raise grapes in traditional wine
country, but will shift production to other regions
A
study has found sharp declines in wine production from Bordeaux,
Rhone and Tuscany, as well as California’s Napa Valley and Chile by
2050, as a warming climate makes it harder to raise grapes in
traditional wine country Photograph: Cephas
Suzanne
Goldenberg, US environment correspondent
Monday
8 April 2013 18.26 BST
Bid adieu to
Bordeaux, but also, quite possibly, a hello to Chateau Yellowstone.
Researchers predict a two-thirds fall in production in the world's
premier wine regions because of climate change.
The study forecasts
sharp declines in wine production from Bordeaux and Rhone regions in
France, Tuscany in Italy and Napa Valley in California and Chile by
2050, as a warming climate makes it harder to grow grapes in
traditional wine country.
But also anticipate
a big push into areas once considered unsuitable. That could mean
more grape varieties from northern Europe, including Britain, the US
north-west and the hills of central China.
Europe change in
areas suitable for growing wine grapes through 2050
The most drastic
decline was expected in Europe. Photograph: Conservation
International
"The fact is
that climate change will lead to a huge shakeup in the geographic
distribution of wine production," said Lee Hannah, a senior
scientist at Conservation International and an author of the study.
Key - change in
areas suitable for growing wine grapes through 2050
Researchers expect
big changes in regions enjoying the cool winters and hot dry summers
that produce good grapes. "It will be harder and harder to grow
those varieties that are currently growing in places in Europe,"
Hannah said. "It doesn't necessarily mean that [they] can't be
grown there, but it will require irrigation and special inputs to
make it work, and that will make it more and more expensive."
Wine grapes are
known to be one of the most finicky of crops, sensitive to subtle
shifts in temperature, rain and sunshine. The industry has been
forward-looking when it comes to anticipating the effects of climate
change.
Wine experts have
known for several years that a hotter, drier climate would change
growing conditions in many of the most prized wine regions –
forcing vineyards to mist grapes on the vine to protect them from the
sun, or move sensitive vines to more hospitable terrain.
But the latest
findings, published in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, still took the researchers by surprise. "We
expected to see significant shifts, but we didn't expect to see
shifts like these," said Hannah.
The scientists used
17 different climate models to gauge the effects on nine major
wine-producing areas. They used two different climate futures for
2050, one assuming a worst-case scenario with a 4.7C (8.5F) warming,
the other a 2.5C increase.
Both forecast a
radical re-ordering of the wine world. The most drastic decline was
expected in Europe, where the scientists found a 85% decrease in
production in Bordeaux, Rhone and Tuscany.
Australia New
Zealand areas suitable for growing wine grapes through 2050
The future was also
bleak for wine growing areas of Australia. Photograph: Conservation
International
The future was also
bleak for wine growing areas of Australia, with a 74% drop, and
California, with a 70% fall.
Wine growers in the
Cape area of South Africa would also be hit hard, with a 55% decline.
Chile's wine producers would expect losses of about 40%, the study
found.
South Africa change
in areas suitable for growing wine grapes through 2050
Wine growers in the
Cape area of South Africa would also be hit hard. Photograph:
Conservation International
But climate change
would also open up other parts of the world to grapes, as growers
look for higher, cooler ground, the study found.
The industry is
already scoping out potential new territory such as Tasmania. The
findings could lead wine growers to strike out for wilderness areas
around Yellowstone Park, or even scale higher into the hills of
central China.
Both areas could be
prime areas for wine production, the study found.
However, that search
for new wine country could in turn create a whole new set of
potential problems, for the wine growers of the new frontier.
Some newly
identified wine growing regions of the future are wilderness areas –
such as that around Yellowstone Park in the US, where there are
already clashes between ranchers and wolves. In China, the suitable
wine growing regions of the future lie squarely in the hill habitat
of the endangered giant panda.
Both are going to be
heading for those same hills.
"Wine is going
to be on the move in the future as will wildlife," said Rebecca
Shaw, a scientist for the Environmental Defence Fund and an author of
the paper. "This adaptation has the potential to threaten the
survival of wildlife."
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