David777
Well-known Member
- Location
- Silicon Valley
Over the last couple decades, the California economy has produced a lot of wealthy people, especially from high tech and real estate. Fair numbers of those people, chasing wealth culture, bought rural lands in order to produce wine grapes to then live that upper class life. Along with massive urban infrastructure and home building development, that has removed significant areas of former natural lands in the state. I am fine with both those being stunted and instead having to face a sustainable future without overall growth. And of course, it is better change for society if people are generally less intoxicated that so many have poor self control over.
Well, now there is apparently too much wine production for the size of a dwindling market. Many people for health reasons are reducing alcohol consumption, especially younger generations. Also, some consumers given legalization, are switching from alcohol to cannabis that is hardly better for those may with addictive personalities.
(California) Wine vineyards are ripping out their fields because there isn't enough demand
Wine vineyards are ripping out their fields because there isn't enough demand
News stories are coming out from very wine touristy Napa County suggest they change into growing cannabis. But that market is in the same situation with so much overproduction now that much is being funneled into illegal markets. Oregon has had the same issue for years now that dramatically reduced costs, putting many smaller and larger farmers out of business. Simply way too easy to produce within huge farms, so likely will collapse too as soon as regulatory fees and taxes lower.
California, Oregon, and Oklahoma are illegally exporting much of those crops out of state. New York given legalization is now a huge destination. This week news has been coming out of Great Britain on significant amounts being smuggled in on airlines. And of course, beer sales are at their lowest levels in a generation. On the other hand, science is increasingly creating all manner of synthetic recreational drugs, that will plague our world.
Well, now there is apparently too much wine production for the size of a dwindling market. Many people for health reasons are reducing alcohol consumption, especially younger generations. Also, some consumers given legalization, are switching from alcohol to cannabis that is hardly better for those may with addictive personalities.
(California) Wine vineyards are ripping out their fields because there isn't enough demand
Wine vineyards are ripping out their fields because there isn't enough demand
News stories are coming out from very wine touristy Napa County suggest they change into growing cannabis. But that market is in the same situation with so much overproduction now that much is being funneled into illegal markets. Oregon has had the same issue for years now that dramatically reduced costs, putting many smaller and larger farmers out of business. Simply way too easy to produce within huge farms, so likely will collapse too as soon as regulatory fees and taxes lower.
California, Oregon, and Oklahoma are illegally exporting much of those crops out of state. New York given legalization is now a huge destination. This week news has been coming out of Great Britain on significant amounts being smuggled in on airlines. And of course, beer sales are at their lowest levels in a generation. On the other hand, science is increasingly creating all manner of synthetic recreational drugs, that will plague our world.