India's First Wine, Food and Hospitality Website, INDIAN WINE ACADEMY, Specialists in Food & Wine Programmes. Food Importers in Ten Cities Across India. Publishers of delWine, India’s First Wine.
                
                
India’s Retail Sector : A Developing Story  India in Numbers : Useful Statistics Wine & Health 101 : Frequently Asked Questions
Advertise With Us
Classifieds
US Report on Indian Market Released
Top Ten Importers of India
On Facebook
 
On Twitter
 
Delhi Wine Club

Global Warming: Chianti in Scandinavia?

It is quite possible, warn the experts in Italy by the end of the century, if global warming continues unchecked, reports Toronto Star.

A study by Florence University linking the effects of rain and temperature to wine production found that increasingly high temperatures and intense rains are likely to threaten the quality of Tuscan wines. Italy 's farmers association warned the cultivation of olive trees, which grow in a mild climate, has almost reached the Alps .

"This rise in temperatures will continue in the next years, and they will be too high and unfavorable for the quality of wine,'' because they cause the grapes to over-ripen, said Simone Orlandini, an agronomist at Florence University and co-author of the study.

"Even if temperatures go up three or four degrees Celsius it will be a big problem," he said. "It will be warmer and rains will be more concentrated in fewer events, thus damaging the earth, which will not be able to absorb all the water."

The study, which was published in the wine magazine VQ, compares quality checks on some of Italy's most famous wines - Brunello di Montalcino, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, Chianti Classico, Barolo, Barbaresco and Amarone - to the weather conditions of the past three or four decades.

The research shows that while warmer temperatures favor wine quality, the rain that comes with them is often bad news.

The world's leading climate scientists warned during a gathering in Paris this month that global warming is so severe that it will lead to a far different planet in 100 years.

Last week the American Association for the Advancement of Science joined the chorus, declaring global climate change 'a growing threat to society.'

A report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change states that if nothing is done to change emissions patterns of greenhouse gases, global temperature could increase as much as 11 degrees by 2100. If greenhouse gas emissions get under control - something scientists say they hope can be achieved - the best estimate is about a three-degree increase.

However, wine makers  in Tuscany are playing down the risk.

"I don't foresee harmful effects within the next 20 years,'' said Filippo Mazzei, whose wine company near Siena produces 700,000 bottles a year, mostly of Chianti Classico. "We are in an area with a temperate climate, and I do not think it faces an immediate risk. I am not saying it is unfounded, but a range of 100 years is not very significant," he said.

On Tuesday, European Union nations announced an ambitious target to cut their greenhouse gas emissions to 20 percent below 1990 levels by the year 2020, one of the boldest moves yet to contain global warming.

Orlandini said that a rise in temperatures would push wine production to the north, allowing regions like Scandinavia to join the industry.

Coldiretti, a farm lobby, said measures should be taken to tackle the threats.

Read Full report at  http://www.thestar.com

Wine In India, Indian Wine, International Wine, Asian Wine Academy, Beer, Champagne, World Wine Academy

     
 

 
 
 
Copyright©indianwineacademy, 2003-2012 |All Rights Reserved
Developed & Designed by Sadilak SoftNet