Austria faces huge quantity drop after devastating conditions earlier this year
- Monday 17 September 2012
Wachau: least hit
Heavy May frosts and severe hailstorms in May and July caused €22m in vineyard damages across the country, according to Österreichische Hagelversicherung (Austrian Hail Insurance).
Regions that suffered most, especially the Kamptal and Weinviertel, which were hit by the frosts, and the hail-pummeled Steiermark, Burgenland and Thermenregion, fortunately have been compensated by a long, hot and generally sunny summer
This, as in other parts of Europe, saw temperatures often hovering between 30º –35ºC and means harvest has been up to two weeks earlier than usual.
Josef Pleil, president of the Austrian Winegrowers' Association said nearly 10,000ha of vineyards were affected by the bad weather, with 4000 of them ‘a total loss’.
‘So we expect a total volume of around 2.2m hectoliters this year, down from 2.9m last year. Still, with the ongoing pleasant conditions, grapes in the undamaged vineyards are showing beautiful ripeness and sugar.’
‘If nothing severe happens in the coming weeks, then it will be a warm, very mature vintage, perhaps in the direction of 2003,’ Michael Moosbrugger, who runs Schloss Gobelsburg in the Kamptal said.
Michael Malat of the Kamptal's Weingut Malat said: ‘This vintage will be somewhere between 2010, which had higher acidity and lower alcohol, and 2011, which tended toward lower acidity and higher alcohol.’
According to the Austria Statistik office, the Kamptal, which is home to top Grüner Veltliner and Riesling sites such as Lamm and Heiligenstein, is likely to harvest 37% fewer grapes than last year.
The Wachau, Austria's most renowned Grüner Veltliner and Riesling region, is expecting only a 12% quantity drop, while the Weinviertel, which accounts for over 40% of the country's entire production of Grüner Veltliner, faces an estimated 43% drop.

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Have your say!
Darrel Joseph
September 20 12:27
The numbers are 100% accurate and come directly from the Austria Statistik office AND by the Austrian Wine Growers Association itself. They provide reliable, thorough research and numbers, and even estimates. And they even describe the weather conditions earlier in the year as "catastrophic". Thorough and quality research was indeed just that.
Marie-Sophie Lodron
September 19 16:32
Rather: Time to do more quality research on numbers. The harvest does not look as bad here as the headline suggests.
Mark Shaw
September 19 01:40
Time to start drinking Marlborough Gruner