Abstract

Smoke taint has become a prominent issue for the global wine industry as climate change continues to impact the length and extremity of fire seasons around the world. Although the issue has prompted a surge in research on the subject in recent years, no singular solution has yet been identified that is capable of maintaining the quality of wine made from smoke-affected grapes. In this review, we summarize the main research on smoke taint, the key discoveries, as well as the prevailing uncertainties. We also examine methods for mitigating smoke taint in the vineyard, in the winery, and post production. We assess the effectiveness of remediation methods (proposed and actual) based on available research. Our findings are in agreement with previous studies, suggesting that the most viable remedies for smoke taint are still the commercially available activated carbon fining and reverse osmosis treatments, but that the quality of the final treated wines is fundamentally dependent on the initial severity of the taint. In this review, suggestions for future studies are introduced for improving our understanding of methods that have thus far only been preliminarily investigated. We select regions that have already been subjected to severe wildfires, and therefore subjected to smoke taint (particularly Australia and California) as a case study to inform other wine-producing countries that will likely be impacted in the future and suggest specific data collection and policy implementation actions that should be taken, even in countries that have not yet been impacted by smoke taint. Ultimately, we streamline the available information on the topic of smoke taint, apply it to a global perspective that considers the various stakeholders involved, and provide a launching point for further research on the topic.

Highlights

  • Wildfires represent a significant climate issue around the world, with implications for land use and public safety

  • This study demonstrated the following: (i) Repeated smoke exposure had a cumulative effect on the concentration of volatile phenols and the sensory perception of smoke taint in wine and (ii) grapevines appeared to be more susceptible to smoke when exposure occurred seven days post veraison, albeit, smoke attributes were perceived to varying degrees in all of the wines made with fruit from smoke-exposed grapevines [32]

  • Among the commercially available methods of remediation, activated carbon fining and reverse osmosis still appear to be the best options for amelioration of smoke-tainted wines, the success of these methods has, far, been restricted to grapes and/or wines which exhibit low to moderate levels of smoke taint

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Summary

Introduction

Wildfires represent a significant climate issue around the world, with implications for land use and public safety. The incidence and severity of wildfires in fire-prone areas have increased in recent years, but fires have begun to affect new regions [1]. Nearly 350 million hectares of land are burned across the globe [2]. In the United States, around 7.5 million acres (~3 million hectares) of land have been impacted by wildfires annually since 2011, with 2020 being the worst affected year, during which 10.3 million acres (~4 million hectares) burned; 40% of which was in the state of California [4]. 85% of the half a million hectares of land burned in Europe annually are contained within the Mediterranean region. During the 2019–2020 fires that occurred in Australia, more than 17 million hectares of land burned, i.e., more than 8 times the area that burned during the historic ”Black Friday” fires in Victoria, Australia in 1939 [7]. With the frequency of heat waves and droughts predicted to increase, the likelihood of wildfires occurring around the world will increase [8]

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