Rechercher dans ce blog

Thursday, February 11, 2021

North Coast wine grape 2020 crop value drops 45% amid fires and the virus - North Bay Business Journal

ersa.indah.link

The value of the North Coast wine grape harvest dropped by 45% last year to $824.5 million, the lowest level in 16 years, according to government crop data released Wednesday.

The drop in total North Coast value — the lowest since the $739. 3 million crop of 2004 and behind the significantly weather-impacted $849 million haul of 2011 — reflects a one-third lighter crop that was actually picked last year and double-digit drops in prices paid. Yet the California wine grape crop overall was down only 13%, to 3.4 million tons, the smallest since 2011, and average pricing slipped 19%.

The combination of North Coast tonnage and pricing declines cut the region’s share of California wine grape crop value last year to 36%, compared with the typical 45%–55% range of the past two decades.

Preliminary figures in this year’s California Grape Crush Report reveal some of the significant local industry turbulence in 2020 from the confluence of late-season massive wildfires and early-season heat spikes coming amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and what had been a looming oversupply of higher-end grapes since 2018.

Compiled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the report is the first official look at tonnage brought into wineries during the fall harvest and prices paid, and it is a starting point for grape and bulk-wine purchase negotiations. The final report is set for release March 10.

But for some market experts the report is raising more questions than providing answers for farmers and vintners about the direction of the market amid the uncertainty of the coronavirus-influenced economy.

“We wonder if the depth of buyers on the (California Central) coast and North Coast enough for all the fruit, given the challenges,” said Glenn Proctor, partner in San Rafael-based wine and grape brokerage Ciatti Co. “It’s still up in the air, because were in a position where we do not have a lot of water (for the 2021 season). It depends on who you talk to whether 2021 will be a big crop.”

At 340,150 tons, the size of last year’s crop from Sonoma, Napa, Mendocino and Lake counties was 29% below the five-year average and on par with tonnage from two decades ago, according to analysis of the report. Last year’s tonnage decline in the region was equivalent to 11.3 million fewer 9-liter cases of North Coast wine.

North Coast wine grape average pricing dropped by double digits last year: Napa, down nearly 21%, to $4,482; Sonoma, almost 16%, $2,362; Mendocino, 13.2%, to $1,474; and Lake, 23.5%, to $1,378. These declines were led by 21% declines for Napa and Sonoma cabernet sauvignon, the region’s largest variety. Napa cab fell by $1,686 a ton, to $6,186, falling below $7,000 for the first time since 2016, and Sonoma cab slipped for a second straight year, to $2,352 a ton.

“Lot of that (decline for cab) in Napa and Sonoma was because of market overage starting 2017 and the rejections of fruit because of the fires,” said Brian Clements, vice president and a partner in Turrentine Brokerage in Novato.

The smaller 2020 crop because of weather and fires plus reduced demand for high-end wines during the restaurant closures in the pandemic has helped bring the North and Central Coast supply of California’s premium grapes closer toward balance, he said.

The Link Lonk


February 11, 2021 at 09:34AM
https://ift.tt/2Z4BRgP

North Coast wine grape 2020 crop value drops 45% amid fires and the virus - North Bay Business Journal

https://ift.tt/3eO3jWb
Grape

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

Dry conditions decrease Brazilian corn production estimate - World Grain

ersa.indah.link BRASILIA, BRAZIL — Delayed planting and continued dry conditions has dropped Brazil’s estimated corn production 11 million...

Popular Posts