Climate categories in viticulture
In viticulture, the climates of wine regions are categorised based on the overall characteristics of the area's climate during the growing season. While variations in macroclimate are acknowledged, the climates of most wine regions are categorised as being part of a Mediterranean, maritime or continental climate. The majority of the world's premium wine production takes place in one of these three climate categories in locations between the 30th parallel and 50th parallel in both the northern and southern hemisphere. While viticulture does exist in some tropical climates, most notably Brazil, the amount of quality wine production in those areas is so small that the climate effect has not been as extensively studied as other categories.
Influence of climate on viticulture
Beyond establishing whether or not viticulture can even be sustained in an area, the climatic influences of a particular area goes a long way in influencing the type of grape varieties grown in a region and the type of viticultural practices that will be used. The presence of adequate sun, heat and water are all vital to the healthy growth and development of grapevines during the growing season. Additionally, continuing research has shed more light on the influence of dormancy that occurs after harvest when the grapevine essentially shuts down and reserves its energy for the beginning of the next year's growing cycle.In general, grapevines thrive in temperate climates which grant the vines long, warm periods during the crucial flowering, fruit set and ripening periods. The physiological processes of a lot of grapevines begin when temperatures reach around. Below this temperature, the vines are usually in a period of dormancy. Drastically below this temperature, such as the freezing point of the vines can be damaged by frost. When the average daily temperature is between the vine will begin flowering. When temperatures rise up to many of the vine's physiological processes are in full stride as grape clusters begin to ripen on the vine. One of the characteristics that differentiates the various climate categories from one another is the occurrence and length of time that these optimal temperatures appear during the growing season.
In addition to temperature, the amount of rainfall is another defining characteristics. On average, a grapevine needs around of water for sustenance during the growing season, not all of which may be provided by natural rain fall. In Mediterranean and many continental climates, the climate during the growing season may be quite dry and require additional irrigation. In contrast, maritime climates often suffer the opposite extreme of having too much rainfall during the growing season which poses its own viticultural hazards.
Other climate factors such as wind, humidity, atmospheric pressure, sunlight as well as diurnal temperature variations—which can define different climate categories—can also have pronounced influences on the viticulture of an area.
Mediterranean climates
Wine regions with Mediterranean climates are characterised by their long growing seasons of moderate to warm temperatures. Throughout the year there is little seasonal change, with temperatures in the winter generally warmer than those of maritime and continental climates. During the grapevine growing season, there is very little rainfall which increases the risk of the viticultural hazard of drought and may present the need for supplemental irrigation.The Mediterranean climate is most readily associated with the areas around the Mediterranean basin, where viticulture and winemaking first flourished on a large scale due to the influence of the Phoenicians, Greeks, and Romans of the ancient world.
Wine regions with Mediterranean climates
- Tuscany and most other Central-Southern Italian wine regions
- Liguria
- Marsala, Sicily
- Sardinia
- Most Greek wine regions
- Cyprus wine regions
- Israeli wine regions
- Jordanian wine regions
- Lebanese wine regions
- Palestinian wine regions
- Most Albanian wine regions
- Most Montenegrin wine regions
- Corsica
- Languedoc and Roussillon
- Provence
- Southern Rhone Valley
- Malta
- Andalusia including Jerez de la Frontera
- Balearic Islands
- Canary Islands
- Catalonia
- Jumilla, Spain
- Vinos de Madrid
- Most Portuguese wine regions
- Primorska Slovenian wine region
- Coastal Croatian wine regions
- Some Azerbaijani wine regions
- Napa Valley and other coastal California wine regions
- Southern Oregon AVA
- Baja California wine regions
- Western Australian and South Australian wine regions
- Chilean Central Valley
- Western coastal South African wine regions
- Western and southern coastal Turkish wine regions:
- *Aegean Region
- *Marmara Region
- *Mediterranean Region
- Thracian Lowlands, Southern Bulgarian wine region
- Upper Struma Valley, Southwestern Bulgarian wine region
- Azores
- Madeira
- Algerian wine regions
- Egyptian wine regions
- Moroccan wine regions
- Tunisian wine regions
Continental climates
There are more wine regions with continental climates in the northern hemisphere than there are in the southern hemisphere. This is due, in part, to small land mass size of southern hemisphere continents relative to the large oceans nearby. This difference means that the oceans exert a more direct influence on the climate of the southern hemisphere wine regions than they would on the larger northern hemisphere continents. There are also several wine regions that have areas that exhibit a continental Mediterranean climate due to their altitude or distance from the sea. These regions will have more distinct seasonal change than Mediterranean climates, but still retain some characteristics like a long growing season that is very dry during the summer.
Wine regions with continental climates
- Burgundy
- Côte-Rôtie and other Northern Rhone wine regions
- Jura wine region
- Most of the Loire Valley
- Rioja
- Italian Piedmont and most other Northern Italian wine regions
- Douro
- Saale-Unstrut, Germany
- Saxony
- Armenian wine regions
- Most Austrian wine regions
- Most Bulgarian wine regions
- Inland Croatia
- Most Czech wine regions
- Most Hungarian wine regions
- Kazakh wine regions
- Most Macedonian wine regions
- Most Moldovan wine regions
- Polish wine regions
- Most Romanian wine regions
- Most Russian wine regions
- Most Serbian wine regions
- Most Slovak wine regions
- Podravje and Posavje, Slovenia
- Inland Turkish wine regions including Central Anatolia and Eastern Anatolia
- Most Ukrainian wine regions
- Sabile, Latvia
- Most Canadian wine regions
- Mendoza, Argentina
- Central Delaware Valley AVA
- Columbia Valley
- Cumberland Valley AVA
- Finger Lakes, NY
- Grand Valley, Colorado
- Hudson River Region
- Lake Erie AVA
- Lake Michigan Shore AVA, Michigan
- Lancaster Valley AVA, Pennsylvania
- Lehigh Valley AVA, Pennsylvania
- Missouri Rhineland
- Niagara Escarpment AVA, NY
- Most of Ohio River Valley AVA
- Most of Ozark Mountain AVA
- Snake River Valley AVA
- Mainland Southeastern New England AVA
- Texas Davis Mountains AVA
- Texas High Plains
- Upper Mississippi River Valley AVA
- Western Connecticut Highlands AVA
- Hokkaido wine regions
- Nagano Prefecture, Japan
- Tendō, Yamagata
- Beijing wine region
- Ningxia, China
- Xinjiang wine regions
- Yantai, China
- East of Cascade Range, Washington state, United States
Maritime climates
Wine regions with maritime climates
- Bordeaux
- Champagne
- Irouléguy AOC, Lower Navarre
- Madiran wine region, Gascony
- Muscadet
- Alsace and Lorraine
- Most German wine regions
- Liechtenstein wine regions
- Moselle Valley including Luxembourg
- Most Swiss wine regions
- Bizkaiko Txakolina, Basque Country
- Rías Baixas
- New Zealand wine regions
- Southern Chile including Bío Bío Valley, Itata Valley, and Malleco Valley
- Block Island, Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket
- Long Island
- North Fork of Roanoke, Virginia
- Puget Sound
- Rocky Knob AVA, Virginia
- Upper Hiwassee Highlands, Georgia
- Volcano Winery, Hawaii
- Willamette Valley
- Alpine Valleys, Victoria
- Australian Pyrenees
- Bowral, New South Wales
- Most of Canberra District wine region
- Cowra highlands, New South Wales
- Fleurieu zone including Kangaroo Island and Langhorne Creek, South Australia
- Gippsland, Victoria
- Grampians, Victoria
- Granite Belt, Queensland/NSW
- Heathcote wine region, Victoria
- Henty, Victoria
- Mudgee highlands, New South Wales
- Orange, New South Wales
- Port Phillip, Victoria
- Tasmania
- Tumbarumba wine region, NSW
- Fraser Valley, British Columbia
- Gulf Islands, BC
- Vancouver Island wine regions including Cowichan Valley, BC
- Médanos, Buenos Aires Province
- Río Negro Province, Argentina
- Tarija wine region, Bolivia
- Caxias do Sul, Brazil
- São Joaquim, Brazil
- Eastern Cape wine-growing areas including St Francis Bay, South Africa
- KwaZulu-Natal highlands
- Mossel Bay, Western Cape, South Africa
- Belgian wine regions
- Most Danish wine regions
- Dutch wine regions
- England and Wales
- Southern Ireland
- Some Georgian wine regions
- Some Abkhazian wine regions
- Some Crimean wine regions including Massandra
- Some Krasnodar Krai wine regions
- Some Black Sea Region Turkish wine regions
- Da Lat, Vietnam
- Chã das Caldeiras, Cape Verde
- Areas of Aguascalientes, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Querétaro, and Zacatecas, central highlands of Mexico
- Thimphu wine region, Bhutan
- West of Cascade Range, Washington state, United States