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French wine growers light fires as frost threatens harvest
By Arnaud RICHARD
Lyon (AFP) April 8, 2021

Italy's sparkling apple trees are frozen to survive
Palazzetta, Italy (AFP) April 8, 2021 - The apples in the orchard in La Palazzetta sparkle like diamonds in the spring sunshine, deliberately covered in ice to protect them from frost.

"Last night we saved 5,000 tonnes of apples using this method" across the Valtellina valley in northern Italy, said Jacopo Fontaneto, of the local branch of the Coldiretti agricultural organisation.

It seems at first glance counterintuitive to freeze the plants to protect them from a sudden drop in temperatures, as was felt across Italy and much of Europe this week.

"It's simple -- we use the existing irrigation system to hose down the plants when temperatures get down to zero. The ice that then forms provides thermal insulation," Fontaneto told AFP.

"It allows the flowers to stay at that temperature, instead of dropping during the night to minus three or minus four degrees Celsius, as happened last night, which would destroy them."

Parts of Italy were hit by a cold snap and even snow earlier this week after basking in above-average temperatures just a few days earlier.

Coldiretti warned the frost had cut agricultural production in some areas by almost half, affecting apricots, peaches, strawberries, kiwis and some vegetables.

While some farmers are freezing their crops, others are lighting bonfires overnight to warm them, at some cost.

"In Italy we are facing the consequences of climate change with a tendency towards tropicalisation and the multiplication of extreme events," Coldiretti said.

Climate events including flooding and rapid shifts between sunshine and bad weather have hit national agricultural production and caused structural damage, causing losses of some 14 billion euros over a decade, Coldiretti added.

French winemakers have lit thousands of small fires to ward off frost which is set to badly hit this year's production, according to industry experts,

The vineyard fires have caused a layer of smog in the southeast of the country, local authorities reported Thursday.

The practice of lighting fires or candles near vines or fruit trees to prevent the formation of frost is a long-standing technique used in early spring when the first green shoots are vulnerable to the cold.

Whole hillsides look as if they are ablaze, creating a striking visual effect, with winemakers scrambling this week as temperatures plunged to below freezing, particularly in the fertile Rhone valley in southeast France.

The frost which has hit a large proportion of French vineyards in recent days is "one of the most serious in recent decades" and will cut production of the year, the CNIV national winemakers' association warned.

"We already know that we will have a very low harvest in 2021," said Jean-Marie Barillere, head of the Comite Europeen des Entreprises Vins (CEEV), a European wine trade group.

The frost has "affected 80 percent of French vineyards", he said. "Arborists and wine growers have just suffered a dark week."

Barillere said it would take around ten days for the profession to accurately assess the state of their grapevines and estimate the damage.

- Air pollution warning -

Regional air quality monitoring body Atmo Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes issued a warning about the fire-induced fine-particle pollution in the southeast region which includes the city of Lyon where a layer of smog was visible on Thursday.

"It happens almost every year when there is a frost, but this time it's massive," director Marie-Blanche Personnaz told AFP of the pollution.

She said farmers were "entirely within their rights" to light fires to save their livelihoods, "but we perhaps need to work on the problem and find other solutions when the (frost) phenomenon is significant."

Some winegrowers use wind machines to keep frost from setting in.

Others use water sprinklers, allowing a fine coating htting sub-zero temperatures as the ice acts like a mini-igloo.

This year's two-night cold snap could be particularly damaging for winemakers and other fruit farmers because the freezing temperatures came after a week of unseasonably warm weather.

Christophe Gratadour, an industry specialist, said that the central Loire area and the Rhone region had been affected.

"All sectors have been hit but it's still too early to measure the effects," he told AFP.

- 'I used a flamethrower' -

In the wine heartland around Bordeaux, producers' body CIVB warned that it was "certain the spring frost will severely affect the harvesting volumes in 2021."

Winegrowers and farmers told AFP of their desperation as they inspected the damage on Thursday morning after a second night of trying to keep the ice at bay.

"We worked on the main hillside and burned straw bales and piles of wood to try to save what we could," winemaker Remy Nodin from Saint-Peray in the Ardeche region of southeast France told AFP.

"The aim was to create a blanket of smoke so that when the sun came up it didn't burn the vines because of the humidity," he added.

"We watered, we heated, nothing worked," said Stephane Leyronas, a kiwi grower, in the nearby Aubenas area.

"I used a flamethrower and lit more than 700 small fires which didn't even last the night," he added.


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Model suggests crop yields will decline as the planet warms. Most crops don't tolerate extreme heat and prolonged droughts. Recently, researchers discovered a gene that helps plants sense heat. Scientists hope their discovery - detailed in a new paper, published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications - will enable the development of more heat-resistant crop varieties. "We need plants that can endure warmer temperatures, have a longer time to flower and a longer growth period," co ... read more

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