Rising global temperatures could change where the majority of the world's wine is produced as mid-latitude regions may no longer be able to grow grapes.
Rising global temperatures could change where the majority of the world's wine is produced as mid-latitude regions may no longer be able to grow grapes, according to researchers.
Up to 70% of current wine-producing regions could face a substantial risk of losing the suitability for wine-growing if global temperatures increase beyond 2 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution, a review of more than 200 studies published Tuesday in Nature Reviews Earth & Environment found.
Too bad it takes generations to reach a good quality vine and with how fast climate is changing the new region won't be growing anything by then. What a shitty world we have created!
Maybe for some varieties, or if the vineyard's shtick is "heritage vines," but younger vines produce more grapes, so big commercial ops rip out and replant vines every 25 years or so, on a rotating schedule. They fruit after about 3 years.
Looks like the generation of decision makers may give a toss now. Planet being screwed wasn't enough, but less wine or more expensive wine and they gonna panic.
I thought that about coffee and am dreading when it does come true. I can hope that all the shit chain stuff can go away but I'll be sad when the local places and diners do too.
In theory yes, you could air root and transfer a plant but it's harder in practice and the grapes may not be the same if the soil type and water type are drastically different in the new location.