Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts

Friday 14 January 2022

Divico - a new hardy red grape variety

Divico - the Swiss cross of Gamaret and Bronner © Dr Joachim Schmid/Agroscope/Plant Grape

Our nephew alerted us to a National Geographic article about a newly engineered grape varietal called Divico. It was created in Switzerland to be a cold-resistant and disease-free vine.  Divico was named after the leader of a Celtic or Gallic tribe who led his people into battle against Julius Caesar – and now it is the name of the latest grape variety to emerge from the laboratory. So it seems logical to investigate this grape for adaptation potential in our environs. 

Divico is a red grape variety created in 1996 at the Agroscope Research Centre in Pully (in the Lavaux wine region of the canton of Vaud, Switzerland). It was further developed in a Swiss government-sponsored laboratory and released in 2013. Formerly known as IRAC 2091, Divico is a cross of two other obscure hybrids: Gamaret and Bronner. Gamaret, itself a Swiss cross of Gamay and Reichensteiner, is “valued for its early ripening and resistance to rot”. The white Bronner has good resistance to both mildews and botrytis but results in a rather 'neutral' wine. Divico has an upright habit and is easy to train. 

The resultant Divico is said to produce a deep-coloured red wine with good aromatics and a prominent tannin profile. It buds early, flowers in early June (avoiding frost damage) and ripens late. The variety has disease resistance to downy mildew (Plasmopara viticola), powdery mildew (Erysiphe necator) and grey rot (Botrytis cinerea). It is an average cropper, so it doesn't require thinning. It only became available commercially from wine nurseries in 2015 and is planted mostly in Switzerland. 

The hope is that Divico will eliminate the need for any pesticides. That feeds right into the organic and sustainable wine movements. Divona, a new white variety, has similar resistance properties. Divona was introduced to the world in October of 2018. 

I had not realised that very little red wine is produced in the UK -- only 5% of the total is red. (I'm really glad we didn't plant more Rondo). In fact, 70% of their wine production is sparkling whites. They've tested Pinot Noir but wines made in England from Pinot grapes lack colour and depth. 

A consortium of six UK vintners has been sponsoring trials by a horticultural research organisation called NIAB EMR. They've planted the first research vineyard at East Malling headed up by Dr. Julien Lecourt (julien.lecourt@emr.ac.uk). They have secured funding to establish a Wine Innovation Centre. They have also established a research winery and among the first wines to be produced was Divico with which they'd been working for three years. So in 2019, year 3, they got their first decent harvest. Not bad. 

It's too early to start planting Divico grapes. Some vintners have produced reasonably good wines from them, but others seem to have fallen short. Perhaps as one wine critic has speculated, it will take some time and we should let the wine age before testing it. 

Sources of Divico:

  • https://www.winegrowers.info/vines/home.htm 
  • https://www.victoriananursery.co.uk/Grape-Vine-Divico/ 

Tuesday 2 November 2021

UK to adjust taxation of alcoholic beverages


BBC reports that GB will institute higher taxes on drinks with higher alcohol content. They expect this to bring attention to English wines. White wine taxes are to decrease. Red wine taxes are to increase. What am I not getting? And why doesn't vodka change?

But the UK government's plans to reform alcohol taxation might not apply in Northern Ireland due to the protocol. The protocol keeps Northern Ireland in the EU single market for goods. As a result, EU excise duty rules continue to apply. The EU sets a minimum tax rate for alcoholic drinks but member states can apply tax at a rate higher than the minimum. But they may make a deal with the EU on this issue. So, northerners will shop for higher alcohol content drinks in the south and Irish Republicans will cross the border to get cheap British wines in the north. 

How is this an important post-Brexit issue to address? 

Anyway, this weekend the EU and US have agreed to eliminate the whiskey tariffs in response to Trumps's steel retaliation trade war. But the Brits will keep theirs in force it appears. 

Tuesday 28 May 2019

UK getting warmer and wetter

This chart presents a comparison of annual averages for key meteorological
 indicators in the United Kingdom from 1961 to 2017. 

Statista has created an effective infographic to illustrate the findings of a new report showing what effect climate change has already exerted on UK weather. They wrote,