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Six biggest ways wine will change

ELIN MCCOY
ELIN MCCOY • 6 min read

As I peer in my crystal glass to puzzle out where the wine world is going next, I see one constant: climate change. It challenged winemakers in 2023, the hottest year in history, and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. 
Wildfires in Greece; massive heat and drought in Spain; and floods, frost, and hail elsewhere in Europe all took their toll last year, resulting in one of the smallest harvests ever. But Napa, subject to wildfires and heat waves in the recent past, escaped with one of the best vintages ever. You could argue that global warming has been good for the UK, as well as fledgling vineyard efforts in Norway and Sweden — places where, in the past, it would have been too cold and rainy to ripen grapes sufficiently. All of this makes its impact very hard to predict for this year.
But there’s other big news in the wine world for 2024. Here are the six major trends I’m watching: 

You’ll be drinking more sauvignon blanc
Taste preferences are shifting: More than half the wine consumed globally, as of 2021, was either white or rosé. US drinkers are leading the way with whites, according to data from the International Organization of Vine and Wine. Now, top regions known for reds, such as Italy’s Mount Etna and the Rhône Valley, are putting more emphasis on their less well-known whites. 
I see more crisp, tart sauvignon blanc from everywhere in 2024, and not just New Zealand, which has a 63% share of sales of the varietal on Boston-based online alcohol delivery platform Drizly.
Oregon is now in the game, with top names such as Andrew Rich and Patricia Green. And although Chile’s boom in the grape started two decades ago — the country is the third-largest producer of the white wine in the world, behind France (first) and New Zealand — the latest examples from ambitious wineries such as  Laberinto,  Tabali and  Viña Leyda are better than ever. 
In California, vineyard acreage of the grape has more than doubled since 2022, so expect many more superb bottlings, both inexpensive and luxury-tier, to hit the shelves. 

Sparkling wine will pop even further
The French drank less Champagne last year, because of inflation. But they still like fizz, and everyone else is in love with wine with bubbles, too. Drinks industry analyst IWSR found the number of Americans who drink sparkling wine grew 30% from 2019 to 2022. About 25% choose bubbles at least twice a week.
But it’s not all champagne. The boom is driven partly by the popularity of prosecco and pét-nats. Spritz cocktails and hard seltzers are also inspiring non-wine drinkers to search out more bubbly. 
The category will get a further boost from a few new American sparkling cuvées. Last year I tasted about two dozen new ones from California, some from unusual grapes like picpoul blanc, a lesser-known variety originating from France’s Rhône Valley. The wines are tart and lemony. (The name translates as “lip stinger”.) And in Oregon, the number of winemakers producing at least one bubbly has quadrupled since 2018.
That’s on top of delicious sparkling wines from seemingly every part of the world — many top restaurants now also carry quality bottles of Italy’s Franciacorta and Trentodoc, Spain’s cava, France’s crémants and England’s sparklers. Sales at Kent-based Chapel Down winery, for example, rose 14% last year. 

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