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FOOD AND DRINK

Why the next few years could be good vintages for French wines

What makes a good or bad year for wine? It's a question that vexes not only vintners but also scientists, who've long looked to weather conditions to provide the answer.

Why the next few years could be good vintages for French wines
Vineyards in Bordeaux are experiencing hotter summers. Photo by Christophe ARCHAMBAULT / AFP

A new study published Wednesday in the journal iScience now argues that climate change could contribute to superior vintages – at least up to a point.

By analysing decades worth of wine critic scores from Bordeaux, the research shows that good years are characterised by warmer temperatures, greater differences between winter and summer, and earlier, shorter growing seasons.

Listen to the team from The Local talking to a wine expert on how to pick good wines on the latest episode of the Talking France podcast – download here or listen on the link below

All conditions that are becoming more frequent as a result of human-caused planetary warming.

“I don’t think that climate change is a good thing,” Andrew Wood, lead author of the study told AFP.

Even though it appears to be improving wine growing conditions, climate change also exposes vineyards to more extreme events, Wood said, from heightened risk of fires in summer to more frost and hail storms in spring.

And even if good years are characterised by a dry and hot summer, too severe a drought can be devastating.

When a certain threshold is reached, quality drops dramatically  “and you can even get the situation in which grapes are dropped from the vine,” said Wood.

“We could be very close to the point at which it stops becoming better, and it starts being a lot worse,” added the University of Oxford scientist. “We just don’t know.”

Wood and colleagues paired detailed climate data with annual wine critic scores from the Bordeaux wine region in southwest France from 1950 to 2020, finding that, for the time being, the trend is positive.

They focused on Bordeaux because its wine region relies exclusively on rainfall for irrigation and because of the long term records of wine scores.

Of course, wine judging is subjective and unblinded, meaning the critics know what they are tasting.

But the paper argues that because there is broad consensus about what makes good versus bad wine, the taste scores offer a reliable means to monitor how crops are changing over time – and they attempted to statistically control for the effects of improving winemaking technology.

“People generally prefer stronger wines which age for longer and give you richer, more intense flavors, higher sweetness, and lower acidity,” said Wood.

“And with climate change – generally, we are seeing a trend across the world that with greater warming, wines are getting stronger.”

Higher temperatures lead to more photosynthesis, which in turn produces more sugar and a higher alcohol content.

Previous studies identified the beneficial effect of rainy winters and high temperatures in summer.

But the researchers in the current study showed that the other seasons also play an important role: wet and warm springs, and dry and cool autumns, are also linked with better rated wines.

They achieved this by matching highly localised, year-round weather data, with critics’ ratings of individual appellation d’origine controlee (AOCs) in Bordeaux.

According to Wood, the same trends could hold true of other wine-growing regions of the world.

But, he stresses, it’s not something to toast.

“The problem in scenarios where it gets really hot is water: if plants don’t have enough, they eventually fail, and when they fail, you lose everything,” he said.

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CLIMATE CRISIS

‘Extreme’ climate blamed for world’s worst wine harvest in 62 years

World wine production dropped 10 percent last year, the biggest fall in more than six decades, because of "extreme" climate changes, the body that monitors the trade said on Thursday.

'Extreme' climate blamed for world's worst wine harvest in 62 years

“Extreme environmental conditions” including droughts, fires and other problems with climate were mostly to blame for the drastic fall, said the International Organisation of Vine and Wine (OIV) that covers nearly 50 wine producing countries.

Australia and Italy suffered the worst, with 26 and 23 percent drops. Spain lost more than a fifth of its production. Harvests in Chile and South Africa were down by more than 10 percent.

The OIV said the global grape harvest was the worst since 1961, and worse even than its early estimates in November.

In further bad news for winemakers, customers drank three per cent less wine in 2023, the French-based intergovernmental body said.

Director John Barker highlighted “drought, extreme heat and fires, as well as heavy rain causing flooding and fungal diseases across major northern and southern hemisphere wine producing regions.”

Although he said climate problems were not solely to blame for the drastic fall, “the most important challenge that the sector faces is climate change.

“We know that the grapevine, as a long-lived plant cultivated in often vulnerable areas, is strongly affected by climate change,” he added.

France bucked the falling harvest trend, with a four percent rise, making it by far the world’s biggest wine producer.

Wine consumption last year was however at its lowest level since 1996, confirming a fall-off over the last five years, according to the figures.

The trend is partly due to price rises caused by inflation and a sharp fall in wine drinking in China – down a quarter – due to its economic slowdown.

The Portuguese, French and Italians remain the world’s biggest wine drinkers per capita.

Barker said the underlying decrease in consumption is being “driven by demographic and lifestyle changes. But given the very complicated influences on global demand at the moment,” it is difficult to know whether the fall will continue.

“What is clear is that inflation is the dominant factor affecting demand in 2023,” he said.

Land given over to growing grapes to eat or for wine fell for the third consecutive year to 7.2 million hectares (17.7 million acres).

But India became one of the global top 10 grape producers for the first time with a three percent rise in the size of its vineyards.

France, however, has been pruning its vineyards back slightly, with its government paying winemakers to pull up vines or to distil their grapes.

The collapse of the Italian harvest to its lowest level since 1950 does not necessarily mean there will be a similar contraction there, said Barker.

Between floods and hailstones, and damp weather causing mildew in the centre and south of the country, the fall was “clearly linked to meteorological conditions”, he said.

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