French grape harvest is ‘poor’

Wine will be lower in alcohol as cold and rainy spring hit the ‘vendange’

FRANCE is facing one of its poorest wine grape harvests in four decades, due to a cold and rainy spring and severe hail storms.

The 2013 harvest is expected to reach just 43.5 million hectolitres - well below the 10-year average of 45.4 million, according to forecasts from the FranceAgriMer public agricultural service.

Jérôme Despey, head of FranceAgriMer's viticulture section, said that would make the 2013 harvest one of the worst in 40 years and only a slight improvement on last year's record low harvest of 41.4 million.

He said cool temperatures and excessive rains contributed to a particularly poor harvest while some vineyard owners in famed wine regions like Bordeaux and Burgundy saw their harvests nearly wiped out by severe hail storms.

Mr Despey added that early tests also showed low sugar content, due to reduced sunshine levels: "Sugar hasn't developed in the grapes and we'll have much lower (alcohol) levels than in previous years."

Forecasts released by the agriculture ministry earlier this month, before devastating storms in Bordeaux, had already predicted France would experience one of the smallest harvests in 40 years in 2013.

This year’s olive harvest in the south-east is also expected to be lower than normal. It does not start until November, but already oléiculteurs are saying they are expecting a low harvest due to high rainfall and the cold winter.
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