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Climate change is coming for your Cabernet

Napa Valley wineries confront climate change
How Napa Valley is preparing for climate change 03:12

Harvest season has just begun in California's Napa Valley. But the $160 billion wine industry could dry up if something isn't done to combat a changing climate. As a grape ripens, the compounds within it perform a delicate, shifting balancing act for the right taste, texture and color — so any shift in climate conditions can be detrimental to the vines. 

Andy Beckstoffer has been growing grapes and providing them for some of the biggest names in California wine country since the early 1970s. But he's concerned about his future harvest.

"The big deal is the erratic nature that we have with climate here," Beckstoffer told CBS News' Jamie Yuccas. "We have bugs we never heard of. We have diseases we never heard of. We've changed the way we farm because of it."

In Napa Valley, Cabernet is king. It's also where researchers are trying to save it with 11 different projects happening all around the area.

Beckstoffer Vineyards is investing tens of millions of dollars partnering with U.C. Davis for the world's most ambitious Cabernet Sauvignon root stock and clone trial. They're looking for more resilient combinations of Cabernet.

Vineyard manager Clint Nelson and researcher Kaan Kurtural said the area has heated up by nearly two degrees per decade. That may not sound like much, but viticulturists say it's enough to eventually make Cabernet grapes extinct.

"You cannot just say, 'Oh we gotta think about it 20 to 30 years from now.' You have to take action now," Kurtural said.

"We don't look at this as just a Northern California trial experiment, we look at this as an industry-wide trial," said Clint Nelson. 

U.C. Davis is using shade nets, switching from horizontal to vertical planting, and various technology to grow a better, stronger grape.

Researchers are testing 100 combinations, but it will take at least six years to yield results. Like any fine wine, Beckstoffer says it will take time. 

The fate of one of America's most famous valleys, however, may hang in the balance.

"We'll use that data to not only fight climate change," Beckstoffer said. "But in the best spot, hopefully to improve the wine quality. That's the big deal."

Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that temperatures in the region have been rising by two degrees per decade, not per year.

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