B.C. vineyards devastated by winter freeze, slashing wine output up to 56%: growers

Sprinklers water grapevines in the Okanagan Valley's wine country near Oliver, B.C., Thursday, Sept. 15, 2016. Wine growers in British Columbia say this year's grape crop and wine production face deep losses after a cold snap gripped the province last winter. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

KELOWNA, B.C. - Wine growers in British Columbia say a bitter cold snap last winter has devastated vineyards, causing irreparable damage to almost half of the province's planted acreage that may force some producers out of business.

The fallout from last December's freeze, that saw temperatures in the Okanagan dip to minus 30 C, has the potential to cut this year's grape and wine production by between 39 per cent and 56 per cent, with direct revenue losses of up to $145 million, said Miles Prodan, Wine Growers B.C. president.

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