Californiaโs wine industry is facing a severe crisis as wine consumption hits a 90-year low and a massive oversupply of grapes leads growers to abandon or rip out tens of thousands of acres of vineyards, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Despite good growing conditions, up to 100,000 tons of grapes are expected to go unharvested again in 2025. Growers are struggling to find buyers, prices have plummeted, and longstanding family businesses are shutting down. Industry experts say the only solution is to reduce production to restore market balance, but recovery remains uncertain as abandoned vineyards and sluggish demand paint a grim outlook. They write:
Driving on Napa Valleyโs Highway 29 looks a little different this harvest. Dirt fields have supplanted many of the regionโs prized vineyards. Menacing piles of dead vines sit atop the fallow ground, stripped of the chance to produce wine ever again.
The scene paints a somber picture of the wine industryโs foremost struggles: Alcohol consumption has hit a 90-year low, and thereโs a major oversupply of wine and grapesย […]
In 2024, California wine experienced its lightest harvest in 20 years โ a 23% decrease from 2023 โ as many California wine growers failed to find buyers for their crop. Some slashed their prices by more than 50% in an attempt to cover a small portion of their farming costs. Industry experts estimated that between 100,000 and 400,000 tons of grapes went unharvested, and 35,000 to 40,000 acres of vines were ripped out. […]
Yet, neither wildfires nor Canada is likely to break open the grape marketโs floodgates. Bitter predicts it will require a 2025 grape harvest of just 2.5 million tons or less โ last yearโs was 2.8 million โ to correct the oversupply.
โThe answer,โ he said, โis to produce less until weโre in balance.โ
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