We use cookies to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners who may combine it with other information that you’ve provided to them or that they’ve collected from your use of their services.
A cookie is a small text file that a website stores on your computer or mobile device when you visit the site.
Every time you visit our websites, you will be prompted to accept or refuse cookies. The purpose is to enable the site to remember your preferences (such as user name, language, etc.) for a certain period of time. That way, you don't have to re-enter them when browsing around the site during the same visit.
Cookies can also be used to establish anonymised statistics about the browsing experience on our sites.
Currently, there are four types of cookies that may be generated as you browse our site: Strictly Necessary, Statistics, Preference and Marketing cookies.
These cookies are essential for you to browse the website and use its features, such as accessing secure areas of the site. Cookies that allow web shops to hold your items in your cart while you are shopping online are an example of strictly necessary cookies. These cookies will generally be first-party session cookies. While it is not required to obtain consent for these cookies, what they do and why they are necessary are explained in the table below.
You can use your browser settings to control whether or not we set session cookies. More information on your browser settings is provided at the bottom of this page.
Please be aware that these cookies are critical to the efficient working of the site. If you choose to disable these cookies from this site, the functionality of the site may be greatly reduced.
Also known as "performance cookies," these cookies collect information about how you use a website, like which pages you visited and which links you clicked on. None of this information can be used to identify you. It is all aggregated and, therefore, anonymized. Their sole purpose is to improve website functions. This includes cookies from third-party analytics services as long as the cookies are for the exclusive use of the owner of the website visited.
Statistical information is used in reports and to improve our site. For example, we have used analytics data to add, remove or change features of the site based on how popular they are with users.
We track, for example:
We use cookies from different partners including Google to provide our analytics data. You can read more about how Google Analytics treats your data on their web site. You can also read Google's full privacy policy.
Google provides a tool to opt-out of Google Analytics. This is available for all modern browsers in the form of a browser plugin. Additionally, you can control how cookies are set using your browser settings.
Also known as "functionality cookies," these cookies allow a website to remember choices you have made in the past, like what language you prefer, whether you have accepted our cookie policy, what region you would like weather reports for, or what your user name and password are so you can automatically log in.
The advertisements you see displayed on this, and other, sites are generated by third parties. These services may use their own anonymous cookies to track how many times a particular ad has been displayed to you and may track your visits to other sites where their ads are displayed. Please note that advertisers can only track visits to sites which display their ads or other content. This tracking is anonymous, meaning that they do not identify who is viewing which ads.
Tracking in this manner allows advertisers to show you ads that are more likely to be interesting to you, and also limit the number of times you see the same ad across a wide number of sites. As an example of how advertisers operate, if you recently researched holidays, adverts for holiday operators may subsequently appear on our sites.
We do not have access to, or control over, these third party cookies; nor can we view the data held by these advertisers. Online advertisers provide ways for you to opt-out of your browsing being tracked. More information about the advertisers we use, and how to opt-out, is provided below.
We display clips from Youtube related to our purchase opportunities. You can view Youtubes's privacy policy on their website. This page also allows you to control what cookies YouTube saves on your computer.
We work with Google to optimise how Google ads are displayed. You can discover how Google protects your privacy relating to ads at its privacy policy.
Cookies you may see used on konvi.app
Cookie name | Default expiration time | Purpose | Description |
---|---|---|---|
_fbp | 3 months | Marketing cookies | Facebook: to store and track visits across websites. |
_ga | 2 years | Statistics cookies | Google Analytics: to store and count pageviews. |
_gat_UA-* | 1 minute | Statistics cookies | Google Analytics: functional |
_gid | 1 day | Statistics cookies | Google Analytics: to store and count pageviews. |
_iub_cs-* | 1 year | Preferences cookies | iubenda: to store cookie consent preferences. |
euconsent-v2 | 1 year | Preferences cookies | To store cookie consent preferences. |
referrerReferralId | 1 browser session | Strictly necessary cookies | Track user referrals |
t_gid | 1 year | Marketing cookies | Taboola: assigns a unique User ID that allows Taboola to recommend specific advertisements and content to this user |
APISID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: Google Ads Optimization |
HSID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide fraud prevention |
LOGIN_INFO | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to store and track visits across websites. |
PREF | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to store and track visits across websites. |
SAPISID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: Google Ads Optimization |
SID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
SIDCC | 1 year | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
SSID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE | 1 year | Strictly necessary cookies | Youtube: to provide bandwidth estimations. |
YSC | 1 browser session | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to store a unique user ID. |
__Secure-1PAPISID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: Google Ads Optimization |
__Secure-1PSID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
__Secure-3PAPISID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: Google Ads Optimization |
__Secure-3PSID | 2 years | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
__Secure-3PSIDCC | 1 year | Marketing cookies | Youtube: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, provide fraud prevention. |
IDE | 1.5 years | Marketing cookies | doubleclick: serving targeted advertisements that are relevant to the user across the web. |
RUL | 1 year | Marketing cookies | doubleclick: serving targeted advertisements that are relevant to the user across the web. |
variant | 1 browser session | Strictly necessary cookies | For providing targeted content to users |
cookie_consent | 1 year | Strictly necessary cookies | For persisting cookie consent |
1P_JAR | 1 month | Marketing cookies | Google: optimize advertising, to provide ads relevant to users |
NID | 1 month | Marketing cookies | Google: to provide ad delivery or retargeting, store user preferences |
You can delete all cookies that are already on your device by clearing the browsing history of your browser. This will remove all cookies from all websites you have visited.
Be aware though that you may also lose some saved information (e.g. saved login details, site preferences).
For more detailed control over site-specific cookies, check the privacy and cookie settings in your preferred browser
You can set most modern browsers to prevent any cookies being placed on your device, but you may then have to manually adjust some preferences every time you visit a site/page. And some services and functionalities may not work properly at all (e.g. profile logging-in).
If you still have any concerns relating to our use of cookies, please contact us at support@konvi.app
With increasing numbers of natural disasters, increasing average surface temperature of the earth over the past century, and significant changes in precipitation climate change has become a very prevalent topic, especially in recent years. In today's article, Konvi is presenting an interview with Justin Knock the Director of Wine of the Oeno group, the award-winning luxury wine partner of Konvi, who is answering the most relevant questions about climate change. Justin has been the judge at the Decanter World Wine Awards since 2005, and the Regional Chair for Australia (along with Huon Hooke) since 2020. He has also judged at the IWC, the South African Top 100, and the inaugural Margaret River Wine Show.
Register your spot for OENO's wine offering on Konvi
The wine industry has been acutely aware of climate change for at least the last two decades, and it is one of the leading topics of conversation when engaging in conversation with wine producers on any level. There is plenty of research at a global level indicating that the world’s most important wine regions face significant challenges in maintaining their recognized styles and quality levels over the next 20-30 years as the impacts of climate change ramp up with higher average temperatures. There is a multitude of problems this presents.
Warmer winters lead to weaker dormancy of vines, so they can begin growing earlier in the season making them susceptible to frost. Warm winters are less effective at killing off viruses and diseases, so disease pressure can be much higher during the following growing season. Warmer seasons also accelerate sugar ripeness ahead of phenological maturity, so wines can be less well-balanced. Or worse, the grapes ripen during the hottest parts of summer rather than during the milder temperatures of Autumn. Droughts are becoming deeper and more prolonged, often exacerbated by lower snowfall in the Alps, Pyrenees, and California, for example. Much discussion centers on finding cooler areas within established regions, and this means higher elevations, or closer to the sea, or at higher latitudes or one site with cooler aspects (north-facing slopes in the northern hemisphere, and south-facing slopes in the southern hemisphere). Even classic regions like Bordeaux are permitting the experimental planting of varieties associated with much warmer climates such as Albariño, Touriga Nacioñal, and Mourvedre. There is almost too much to discuss but I would say that climate change is the single most important production issue in the wine industry this century.
As described above with Bordeaux and experimental plantings. Champagne houses buying land and planting vines in England for high-quality sparkling wine. Merlot is being abandoned in many areas and being replanted with later-ripening Cabernet Franc. Barolo and Barbaresco producers in southern Piedmont buying land and estates in Alto Piemonte, which is further north, more elevated, and wooded. Cava producers in Catalunya planting in much higher areas west of Barcelona. Producers planting varieties like Assyrtiko, Fiano, and other grape varieties associated with the Mediterranean in regions that are established with classic French varieties such as Syrah or Cabernet Sauvignon such as McLaren Vale or the Swartland in South Africa. Producers in the Veneto moving away from Burgundian-style trellises to traditional pergola methods which provide more shade and elevation. Domaines in Burgundy buy land in the Haut Côtes where land is cheaper, at higher elevations, and cooler. The list goes on and on.
Northern hemisphere regions are already warm and dry, and quite continental. Portugal and Spain are good examples. Parts of South Africa and Australia that are far from the coast and without higher elevations will suffer. The central valley of California is reliant on snowmelt for irrigation, and the Riverland region of South Australia is also reliant on river water for irrigation.
Regions that are already cool-climate. England, Germany, parts of eastern Europe, Washington, Canada, the Finger Lakes in New York state, and new regions in mountainous areas not necessarily associated with wine such as Mexico, Turkey, and regions around the Alps in Europe.
Keep an eye on classic regions with the potential to mitigate climate changes through some of the elements above where elevation and aspect can be improved. This would include Burgundy, Piedmont, parts of Tuscany, the Mosel in Germany, northern California, the Santa Cruz Mountains, and Tasmania. Keep an eye on top producers moving into other regions completely.
While climate change will most definitely have a significant impact on wine production and industry in general, it will also pose an opportunity for certain regions around the globe that have been affected by cool climates. To get ahead of this individuals can implement various strategies such as wine portfolio diversification to ensure that their exposure is minimized as much as possible.