May 10, 2008: Spanish vineyard
cuts alcoho content for survival.
By JUMILLA, Spain (AP)
Global warming may be the latest threat to the wine
industry, but a clutch of producers in one of Spain's
hardest-hit regions say they've found a way to survive and
even profit from it.
Vintners face a twin danger from climate change. Higher
temperatures mean grapes with more sugar and thus more
alcohol, but wines packing a heftier wallop are less popular
these days, in part because people are wary of drinking and
driving. Plus, drought can stop vines from producing fruit
altogether.
So winemakers in Spain's southeastern Murcia region
thought up a way to coax their vines into making a product
that retains the character of a classic wine, only with much
less alcohol — 6.5% by volume, compared to 14% or more for
many traditionally made Spanish wines.
The technique and product are so groundbreaking the
European Union had to devise a new category — "wine with
reduced alcohol content" — for it to be marketed.
"Vineyards are migrating north to avoid heat. If we want
to stay in the business we have to adapt. And this method
gives us a means to do so," said Pedro Jose Martinez, the
brains behind the project at a winery called Casa de la
Ermita winery, near the town of Jumilla.
His pride and joy, called Altos de la Ermita, is redolent
of cherries, plums and blackberries, with a smoky hint of
the oak barrels it spent six months maturing in. It tastes
light and fruity, like a good summer drinking wine. Only a
slight lack of "legs" — tear-like traces wine leaves on the
side of a glass — gives away the low alcohol content.
"And you can drink two good glasses with your lunch and
still be under the legal limit," said the project's chief
winemaker, Marcial Martinez, who is unrelated to Pedro Jose
Martinez, raising a glass of his own.
The winery says it knows of no other producers making
this kind of wine but expects competition to emerge. It
plans to release 770,000 bottles of Altos in this the debut
year and 1.5 million in 2009, with sales planned in Spain
and around the world.
Much is at stake in Spain's slice of the global warming
crisis. The wine industry here posted US$9 billion in
revenue in 2006, according to the Spanish Wine Federation,
and employs 400,000 people. No other country on earth has so
much land dedicated to growing grapes.
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Most wine-producing areas in Spain have changed
little in appearance in 3,000 years since eastern
Mediterranean traders like the Phoenicians first introduced
staples such as olives, almonds and grapes. Wine regions
like La Mancha and Murcia face pressure from several
sources: changing consumer preferences, new laws to cut the
road accident death toll and European Union legislation
aimed at reducing overproduction.
"Hot country" wines like those of southern Spain, with
levels as high as 15% alcohol, are no longer popular in the
world's trendy wine shops. Gone are the days when
wine-lovers enjoyed heady, oaky wines typical of the late
1980s and 1990s. The pendulum has swung the other way and
today people prefer lighter styles, like French Bordeaux
with 13% alcohol.
But it is rising temperatures and drought that are
worrying vine farmers most. Records show Spain is
experiencing its driest year since record-keeping began 60
years ago.
"We are getting higher alcohol levels because of hot
weather and excessive evaporation from the grapes," said
Jorge Garcia, manager of the Vitivinos cooperative winery in
Villamalea on the southeastern fringe of La Mancha — the
world's single largest wine-producing region, according to
the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
"Producers are leaving winemaking for mushroom
cultivation and edible rabbit breeding," Garcia said as a
whiff of mushroom compost drifted from low-built white
buildings dotting fields where vineyards once thrived.
Juan Manuel Gomez, agriculturalist at Casa de la Ermita,
said it had not rained in his area since October. Luckily,
the vineyard has a spring for drip irrigation. But areas
unable to irrigate, he said, "are almost certainly doomed to
give up wine production."
The Ermita vineyard's technique uses carefully controlled
irrigation to trick vines into making grapes with less sugar
and thus significantly less potential for alcohol. The
finished wine is then put through rotating cones to separate
out alcohol molecules. It is this step that made it
necessary for the EU to devise a new category of wine.
"We manage to achieve a product that retains all the
sensorial characteristics of a classic wine, but with only
6.5% alcohol," said Marcial Martinez.
JUMILLA, Spain (AP)

Προσθήκη:
10/05/2008
Τελευταία Ανανέωση:
10/05/2008
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