I thought the use of "adaptation wedges" was a nice touch.  Pass the Pinot 
Noir?  Cheers - G


A need for planned adaptation to climate change in the wine industry

Marc J Metzger and Mark D A Rounsevell
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[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>

Centre for the Study of Environmental Change and Sustainability, School of 
Geosciences, University of Edinburgh, Drummond Street, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, UK

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Abstract<http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/6/3/031001> 
References<http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/6/3/031001/refs>
PERSPECTIVE

This is a Perspective for the article 2011 Environ. Res. Lett. 6 024024 
<http://iopscience.iop.org/1748-9326/6/2/024024>

The diversity of wine production depends on subtle differences in microclimate 
and is therefore especially sensitive to climate change. A warmer climate will 
impact directly on wine-grapes through over-ripening, drying out, rising 
acidity levels, and greater vulnerability to pests and disease, resulting in 
changes in wine quality (e.g. complexity, balance and structure) or potentially 
the style of wine that can be produced. The growing scientific evidence for 
significant climate change in the coming decades means that adaptation will be 
of critical importance to the multi-billion dollar global wine-industry in 
general, and to quality wine producers in particular (White et al 2006, 2009; 
Hertsgaard 2011).

Adaptation is understood as an adjustment in natural or human systems in 
response to actual or expected environmental change, which moderates harm or 
exploits beneficial opportunities (IPCC 2007). Autonomous adaptation has been 
an integral part of the 20th century wine industry. Technological advances, 
changes in consumer demand, and global competition have meant that growers and 
producers have had to adapt to stay in business. The gradual temperature rise 
in the 20th Century (0.7 °C globally) has been accommodated successfully by 
gradual changes in vine management, technological measures, production control, 
and marketing (White et al 2009), although this has in many cases resulted in 
the production of bolder, more alcoholic wines (Hertsgaard 2011). In spite of 
this success, the wine industry is surprisingly conservative when it comes to 
considering longer term planned adaptation for substantial climate change 
impacts. A few producers are expanding to new locations at higher altitudes or 
cooler climates (e.g. Torres is developing new vineyards high in the Pyrenees, 
and Mouton Rothschild is setting up new vineyards in South America), and the 
legal and cultural restrictions of Appelation d'Origine Cȏntrollée (AOC) 
systems are being discussed (White et al 2009). Changes in the AOC regulations 
would, for example, be imperative if different grape varieties were to be 
cultivated in response to climate change. Thus far, however, there has been 
little coordinated action to plan ahead. The third Climate Change and Wine 
conference organised by the wine industry (April 2011 in Marbella, Spain; 
www.climatechangeandwine.com<http://www.climatechangeandwine.com>), exemplifies 
this situation since it focused on observed impacts and sustainable production 
(mitigation), rather than on adaptation to cope with projected change.

Awareness and understanding of potential change is crucial in raising adaptive 
capacity (Metzger et al 2008). Diffenbaugh et al (2011) have recently developed 
a novel method for communicating potential climate change impacts for the wine 
industry using climate adaptation wedges. These diagrams summarise projected 
climate change impacts over time and distinguish the net gain or loss in wine 
production under a range of adaptation strategies. The climate adaptation 
wedges form a strong synthesis, illustrating how some losses can be negated 
with continued autonomous adaptation, but that even with effective planned 
adaptation the quality of premium wine-grapes is likely to alter. Although the 
study focused on the western US, the adaptation wedges can be compiled fairly 
easily for other wine regions, or even individual producers. As such, they can 
form an important communication tool, but can also help guide longer term 
strategic planning.

Adaptation wedges require careful interpretation and it is probably this 
interpretation process that will provide the most valuable insights. The 
climate change impacts in the diagrams are based on observed relationships 
between climate and wine production, which is assumed to stay unchanged in the 
future. However, rapid climate change will be a great stimulus for a complex 
and unprecedented transformation of the industry. Similarly, the potential 
contributions of the alternative adaptation strategies to cope with climate 
change are best-estimates given current knowledge, but are open to discussion 
among experts. As such, the adaptation wedges can form an important component 
of strategic conversations (cf Van der Heijden 2000) as part of wider foresight 
analysis regarding the future directions for a region or a producer.

However, changes in the wine sector will not be mediated by physical changes in 
the climate alone. Changes in consumer preferences and the geography of global 
wine demand will have a strong effect on what wine is produced where. Moreover 
the method of changing grape varieties as an adaptation to climate change has 
potential pitfalls since consumers associate wine produced in a region with 
certain grape varieties. Changing this will change dramatically the content of 
the wine bottle, and how consumers will react to this is unknown. Regions such 
as Burgundy are likely to be strongly adversely affected by this issue since 
the pinot noir grape used to produce most Burgundian red wines is especially 
sensitive to climate conditions (White et al 2009). Would Burgundy wines 
continue to command such high prices if they were produced from Syrah rather 
than Pinot noir?

There are clearly challenging times ahead for the wine industry. Greater 
awareness of the likely changes ahead will benefit the industry at large, while 
strategic planning will provide individual producers with a comparative 
advantage over competitors. To cope with projected change, long term planned 
adaptation strategies deserve greater attention. These include possible 
geographic shifts in production, adjustments to AOC systems, and marketing 
strategies to influence consumer demand. Foresight methods, including scenario 
analysis (Rounsevell & Metzger 2010) and the exploration of climate adaptation 
wedges (Diffenbaugh et al 2011) are important tools that can help the wine 
industry in planning for an uncertain future.

References

Diffenbaugh N S, White M A, Jones G V and Ashfaq M 2011 Climate adaptation 
wedges: a case study of premium wine in the western United States Environ. Res. 
Lett. 6 024024<http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/6/2/024024>

Hertsgaard M 2011 Hot: Living Through the Next Fifty Years on Earth (New York: 
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

IPCC 2007 Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaption and Vulnerability. 
Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change ed M L Parry, O F Canziani, J P 
Palutikof, P J van der Linden and C E Hanson (Cambridge: Cambridge University 
Press)

Metzger M J, Schröter D, Leemans R and Cramer W 2008 A spatially explicit and 
quantitative vulnerability assessment of ecosystem service change in Europe 
Reg. Environ. Change 8 91–107<http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10113-008-0044-x>

Rounsevell M D A and Metzger M J 2010 Developing qualitative scenario 
storylines for environmental change assessment Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: 
Climate Change 1 606–19<http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/wcc.63>

Van der Heijden K 2000 Scenarios: The Art of Strategic Conversation 2nd ed 
(Chichester: John Wiley & Sons)

White M A, Diffenbaugh N S, Jones G V, Pal J S and Giorgi F 2006 Extreme heat 
reduces and shifts United States premium wine production in the 21st century 
Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. 103 11217–22<http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0603230103>

White M A, Whalen P and Jones G V 2009 Land and wine Nature Geoscience 2 
82–4<http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ngeo429>

Dates

Issue 3 (July-September 2011)

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