ST. HELENA, Calif. — Last September, a wildfire tore through one of Dario Sattui’s Napa Valley wineries, destroying millions of dollars in property and equipment, along with 9,000 cases of wine.
November brought a second disaster: Mr. Sattui realized the precious crop of cabernet grapes that survived the fire had been ruined by the smoke. There would be no 2020 vintage.
A freakishly dry winter led to a third calamity: By spring, the reservoir at another of Mr. Sattui’s vineyards was all but empty, meaning little water to irrigate the new crop.
Finally, in March, came a fourth blow: Mr. Sattui’s insurers said they would no longer cover the winery that had burned down. Neither would any other company. In the patois of insurance, the winery will go bare into this year’s burning season, which experts predict to be especially fierce.
“We got hit every which way we could,” Mr. Sattui said. “We can’t keep going like this.”
In Napa Valley, the lush heartland of America’s high-end wine industry, climate change is spelling calamity. Not outwardly: On the main road running through the small town of St. Helena, tourists still stream into wineries with exquisitely appointed tasting rooms. […]
Full article: Scorched, Parched and Now Uninsurable: Climate Change Hits Wine Country
Photo: Adobe Stock / Romolo Tavani For many California industrial facilities, above average rainfall brought 60-day…
U.S. Forest Service firefighters in the Angeles National Forest burn piles of forest debris below…
New hub will connect communities with resources and funding available through President Biden’s Investing in…
Sea spray rereleases large amounts of PFAS from the ocean into the atmosphere. Credit: Pexels/Jess Loiterton…
(LtoR) Katie Kim, Fisher Parry and Kira Anderson with the Southern Nevada Water Authority's Youth…
A container ship navigates through the Miraflores locks of the Panama Canal on Nov. 3. Drought…