The third edition of the international Wine Future 2021 summit has come to an end after four days of lively talks between professionals from very different fields. Nearly 100 speakers took part last week in a congress that, for the first time, has had to transfer from a physical location, as it did in Logroño and Hong Kong, to a virtual one, in the midst of the pandemic that is sweeping the world.
The need to hold this event as a virtual meeting has taught us many more things than the congress originally planned. The participating speakers had the arduous task of tackling many of the burning issues surrounding wine and its challenges, such as the effect of Covid on the sector, transformations in wine consumption, the growth of trade barriers in the world, climate change and its effects, sustainability in wine..., in a format of 45-minute meetings, in which several professionals discussed each of these topics with each other.
Typical of these congresses, the expectations are always much more ambitious than reality: to provide answers for all the major issues of importance for wine. No one felt frustrated for not having solved the enigmas of the subjects dealt with, they are never fully answered, and certainly this was not the most important thing.
Problem-solving skills
Wine Future ends with a handful of valuable lessons. The most important of all is the ability of human beings to solve problems. Recently we have witnessed this with the discovery of several vaccines against COVID in record time. Researchers from half the world put all their intelligence and knowledge to work together to advance the study of the virus, making the impossible possible. And to make all this possible, a fundamental tool was needed: technology. The fact that something like this happened in global health in so little time shows us that it is also possible to transform the reality of any other sector.
And that is how this International Congress began, with the possibility of reaching every corner of the world and bringing together professionals from different fields, nationalities, and profiles. And not only this, but also allowing people to attend and take part from their living rooms or offices, with no need to travel.