Wineries warming to hybrids

Chinese winemakers are turning to hybrid grapes in the hopes of making the sector more climate resilient. Picture: AFP

Chinese winemakers are turning to hybrid grapes in the hopes of making the sector more climate resilient. Picture: AFP

Published Oct 4, 2024

Share

At at laboratory in Beijing, purple and green hybrid-species grapes are laid out on a board for testing, part of the strategy China’s nascent wine industry is using to try to combat climate challenges.

Scientists are using genetics and artificial intelligence to address imperfect weather, as well as anticipate future problems that might be wrought by rising global temperatures.

“In China, since we have a young industry, we don’t have many clear observations about the effect of climate change,” Dai Zhanwu, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), said. “But globally ... there are many clearly observed impacts.”

The world’s wine production dropped 10% last year, mostly because of “extreme environmental conditions” such as droughts and fires, according to a leading industry body. Scientists say climate change, driven by greenhouse gas emissions, is making extreme weather more frequent and intense.

Global warming is also affecting grape quality, a recent review in science journal Nature said, meaning “the suitability of wine-growing areas is changing, and there will be winners and losers”.

Many Chinese wineries are determined to overcome the challenges.

“(Producers) are consulting us to see what will happen in the next decades, what they should do to be prepared,” said Dai, whose work also involves collaboration with European institutions.

Solutions are sought in the sterile calm of CAS laboratories and in the dusty fields of wine-producing areas like northern Ningxia. There, temperatures in winter drop so low that vines have to be buried. Producers said they were seeing the effects of a hotter world.

“They really fear it,” said Ningxia researcher Liang Yuwen. “From the point of view of a cultivator, the most feared thing is instability of climate, like sudden cooling, like hail, like extremely cold weather.”

Scientists are using genetics and artificial intelligence to address imperfect weather conditions and climate challenges affecting the wine sector. Picture: Greg Baker/AFP

Liang and others said harvests were starting earlier because of climate conditions. Award-winning winemaker Zhang Jing said she has noticed the effect on her grapes.

“When the climate is suddenly hot, the grapes ripen too fast ... The accumulation of sugar is too high, but the acidity is too low. This imbalance is a huge challenge,” she said.

Zhang and others said they were experimenting with cultivation practices, and even considering starting vineyards in cooler locations, such as mountainous Yunnan and Tibet.

Hybrid grapes, protected by a net bag, that are being tested at the Ningxia Grape Test Base, an experimental vineyard, in Yinchuan, in China’s northern Ningxia region. Picture: AFP

Dai’s team in Beijing are using mathematical and climate modelling to try to predict where future growing regions might be.

“We want to know if we plant some vineyards in a given position, whether that position will keep the sustainability in the context of climate change, so what will happen in the next 10, 30 or 50 years,” said Dai.

The most ambitious strategies involve developing new hybrid grape varieties that are more resistant to inclement weather.

In Beijing, Dai and his colleagues are delving into grape DNA, trying to understand the roles specific genes play in factors like colour, aroma and drought resistance. Promising strains are tested in the field.

At an experimental CAS vineyard in Ningxia, researcher Xie Jun showed rows of hybrid vines, their bunches of fruit protected by mesh bags to keep away pests.

“(The point is) to cross the good traits of the parent vines. For instance, the father plant’s cold resistance and drought resistance might be better, and then for the mother plant, the fruit quality might be better,” he said.

As climate change impacts grape quality, “existing varieties will not be able to meet the standards of the raw materials needed for winemaking.

Hybrids are what they need,” he said. There are registered Chinese hybrids used in winemaking, the best known being Beihong and Beimei.

They were developed by crossing a cold-resistant native wild vine, Vitis amurensis, with better-tasting European species.

The resulting plants can resist temperatures lower than -20oC, so do not need to be buried in winter. That has saved Jiuxi, a hybrid-using winemaker Liang works with, a lot of money.

Sipping on its wine, Dream Joy, a semi-sweet red, Liang said confidence in hybrid grapes’ quality was growing.

Researcher Liang Yuwen said confidence in hybrid grapes' quality was growing. Picture: AFP

“This variety will certainly be able to make a wine with Chinese characteristics,” he said.

While in the past, hybrids were not thought to make particularly good drinking – a “prejudice”, said Dai –they are now more widely used.

“With the challenge of climate change, I think during the past 10 years, even in Europe, they changed their minds,” Dai said.

Cape Times