Argentine Cherry Crops are Fine, The Cool Down

A vibrant orchard with rows of cherry trees laden with red fruit, surrounded by lush green grass under a clear blue sky.

From The Climate Realism

By Linnea Lueken

A close-up of a cherry tree branch with bright red cherries and lush green leaves.

The Cool Down (TCD) claimed in a recent article, “Supply of popular fruit plummets as severe storms devastate crops: ‘On course for its worst season,’” that Argentine cherry crops are being devastated by severe rain and hailstorms due to climate change. This is mostly false.

While it’s true that a recent season of cherries was ruined by bad weather, there is no evidence that a single year of bad weather is a sign of climate change. There is no long-term trend of worsening weather in Argentina and cherry production there over the past three decades has risen considerably.

TCD claimed that cherry growers in Argentina are having a bad season, “with severe rain and hailstorms” that TCD classifies as a “change in climate.”

Of course, a single season of bad weather is not climate change. Climate is measured over a long period of time, so one year of severe storms and hail cannot be indicative alone of effects from climate change.

TCD says that “frequent extreme weather events, which have been increasing, damage agricultural yields.”

There is no easily accessible data about severe downpours in Argentina and their trends, which are likely different depending on the region of the country. It’s important to note that Argentina has everything from ice and penguins to tropical rainforest to mountain deserts, and natural climate change will impact regions differently.

But the World Bank does collect average annual rainfall data for Argentina, which show that precipitation varies from year to year, and rose gradually through the 1970s and early 2000s, before beginning to decline again afterwards. (See figure below)

Line graph showing observed annual precipitation in Argentina from 1901 to 2024, featuring a blue line for annual mean precipitation and a purple line for a 5-year Gaussian smooth.

The World Bank says that annual fluctuations in rainfall in Argentina are driven largely by the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) pattern in the Pacific Ocean, which is a natural phenomenon. During the 2025 growing season, there were El Niño conditions present, which generally cause an increase in heavy rainfall in most parts of Argentina, especially in the spring.

So, existing data undercuts TCD’s assertion that weather extremes are increasing in Argentina.

However, the next best data to look at to determine whether climate change is destroying Argentina’s cherry industry is cherry production yields.

According to data from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, Argentina has seen a fairly steady increase in cherry production over nearly the entire period of human-caused climate change is said to have occurred. As evidence, from 1990 to 2024, the last year for which the FAO reports data, Argentine cherry production increased by approximately 37 percent. (See figure below)

Line graph displaying cherry production in Argentina from 1990 to 2024, showing fluctuating growth with significant peaks and a notable dip around 2010.

Argentina’s all-time production high was set in 2010, with the 2024 coming in second for the highest cherry production on record.

The Cool Down doesn’t seem to understand what farmers throughout time have known: weather is fickle, with floods and droughts all too common. Nothing has changed in this regard.

A single bad harvest is not evidence of climate change, only a long-term trend in worsening weather and falling production might indicate climate change is causing harm, but such trends don’t exist.

The Cool Down is an environmental advocacy website, billing itself as “America’s mainstream climate brand.” Thus, it should come as no surprise that every bad weather story is being used to prop up a climate alarmist perspective.

There is no evidence that climate change is harming Argentina’s cherry industry; that’s an inconvenient truth that The Cool Down evidently can’t handle.


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