Hungarian wine and wine regions in danger?

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By the end of the 21st century, Hungarian winemakers should expect a natural environment similar to the one near the Mediterranean Sea today, Attila Buzási, an assistant professor at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, said in a recently published paper. According to the expert, growing olaszrizling (Italian Riesling), kadarka, or hárslevelű will be uncertain. However, in the case of red wines, vintners might improve not only quality but also competitiveness, thanks to climate change.

According to 24.hu, consumers need to get used to the idea that they will not get the same quality, taste, and quantity from Hungarian winemakers because of extreme weather conditions. Based on the forecasts, the weather will become warmer in Hungary in the next decades, thanks to climate change. Furthermore, the intensity and the pattern of the rainfall will be much more volatile than today.

This process has a significant effect on the winegrowing and winemaking industry and will affect the quality of the wines as well. For example,

such iconic Hungarian grape types as the Italian Riesling (olaszrizling), kadarka, or hárslevelű are sensitive to these conditions.

Based on some climate models, the weather in Hungary will dramatically change in the 21st century. As a result, almost no wine regions will have the same weather conditions as at the beginning of the 2000s.

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One comment

  1. I would like to be around when those predicted climate changes do not happen, but I am 75 now and not likely to reach 2050, much less a latter part of the century. From somewhere I hope to read accounts of Hungarian wine production and see that the only change is increased overall production.

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