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Showing posts with label Peat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peat. Show all posts

Friday, 19 September 2025

How Scottish Distilleries Can Adapt to a Proposed Peat Ban

Single malt Scotch with peat smoke is iconic: its peat influence lends that characteristic smoky, earthy, maritime flavour that many drinkers love.

 But increasing environmental concern over peatlands, as carbon sinks, as habitats, and in terms of biodiversity, means pressure is rising on policy makers to restrict peat extraction or usage. 

In Scotland, the government has proposed or consulted on bans or strong restrictions on the sale of peat, which would have knock-on effects for whisky makers. 

So how might distilleries respond, adapt, survive — and perhaps even thrive — under such a change?

What the Stakeholders Say

Before talking solutions, it’s worth summarising what distilleries, regulators, and research bodies are saying now:

The Scotch Whisky Association (SWA) has emphasised that peat-smoked malt is essential to peated single malts, and that a total ban would threaten jobs in rural areas. 

In government consultations, many whisky organisations argued for an exemption for the whisky industry, or for phased approaches, citing lack of current viable alternatives. 

On the environmental side, restoration of peatlands, improved extraction practices, and research into more efficient peat use or substituting materials are being proposed. 

Research at places like the Scotch Whisky Research Institute (SWRI) is underway looking at whether other biomass sources might replicate—or partially replicate—the flavour-profile peat smoke delivers. 

Some of the key obstacles they must overcome:

Flavour loss / identity risk

Peated single malts have built their identity on the smoke/peat phenols. Changes in peat source, intensity or eliminating peat altogether can alter that flavour in ways consumers will notice. The distinction is not just “smoky vs un-smoky” but subtleties: the type of peat, the phenol content, other chemical components. 

Regulatory constraints

Scotch whisky’s regulations are strict: you can’t add flavouring or smoke-imparting agents that aren’t part of the traditional process. Any alternative must fit within those legal definitions if the whisky is still to be called Scotch. 

Supply and cost of peat / alternatives

If peat becomes more restricted, the price may rise; supply chains might shrink. Also, any alternative (other biomass materials, technologies, different peat sources) might be more expensive or less well-tested. 

Consumer expectations

Many drinkers expect certain brands and styles to continue delivering a particular smoky profile. If flavours change, there’s risk of brand damage or loss of market segment.

Environmental and ethical pressures

Even without regulation, there’s growing consumer demand for sustainability. Distilleries will need to show they are minimizing environmental harm, restoring peatlands, etc.

Coping Strategies: What Distilleries Can Do

Given those challenges, here are some strategies distilleries might adopt (and some already are):

Phased reduction rather than abrupt ban

Gradually reducing peat usage, lowering phenol levels, sourcing peat more sparingly. Some distilleries already experiment with adjusting the malting schedules (time, airflow, amount of peat smoke) to use less peat while keeping as much flavour as possible. Highland Park, for example, has examined how “tiny adjustments to the schedule … meant they could reduce the amount of peat needed to achieve the right balance of phenols.” 

Peat provenance & “better peat” sourcing

Using peat from sources that allow more sustainable extraction, perhaps hand-cut peat rather than mechanically cut; selecting peat from less sensitive bogs; working with planning frameworks that limit or manage extraction. 

Peatland restoration & environmental offsetting

If peat is used, then restoring peatlands to help sequester carbon lost. Projects like the Peatland Water Sanctuary initiative by Beam Suntory (Ardmore, etc.) aim to restore peatland equivalent to or greater than that used by distillery operations. 

Scotch Whisky Association

Isle of Arran Distillers is restoring 325 hectares of peatland on Dougarie Estate, with long-term emission reduction goals. 

Alternative smoke sources / biomasses

Research into other kinds of biomass smoke (wood, heather, other organic matter) that might replicate some of the aroma or phenolic character of peat smoke. Whether these are acceptable under Scotch whisky regulations is another question, but as an area of R&D this looks promising. 

Using ex-peated casks or re-using smoke character

One creative idea is using casks that were previously used to mature peated whisky, allowing some of that peat character to transfer (or linger) in subsequent spirits, without using peat smoke in the malting. There has been at least some experimentation in this direction. 

Marketing & style diversification

As peat becomes more expensive or tightly regulated, distilleries might diversify: expand the non-peated lines, emphasise lighter smoke, or different flavour profiles (sweet, fruity, sherry finishes). This gives options for consumers and helps maintain sales if peated styles become less feasible. Some already exist in that space.

Regulatory engagement / exemptions

Whisky producers can engage with policy makers to seek specific exemptions, transitional periods, or carve-outs recognising that for some styles, especially peated single malts, peat use is not just tradition but a defining trait. Also, distilleries can work with regulators to define what count as acceptable alternatives.

Innovation in process efficiency

More precise control over the peat smoke in the malting process, improved kilning techniques, better control over moisture/airflow/etc to get maximum phenolic transfer with minimal peat. This could reduce the volume of peat needed while retaining flavour.

What Might a Future Distillery Landscape Look Like?

If bans or severe restrictions come into force, here are some possible scenarios:

Some distilleries will shift to producing lighter or no-peat whiskies; others will become more specialised, producing heavier peat whiskies but perhaps at smaller volumes, premium prices.

We might see greater segmentation: “peat-less” single malts, lightly peated, heavily peated, etc., with more transparent labelling about peat intensity or source.

Brands that can afford R&D and environmental concessions will lead; smaller distilleries may find the transition harder without financial or institutional support.

The regulation might allow some peat use under strict licensing, for heritage brands, or for small-scale distilleries, similar to how some other industries have special status during transitions.

Risks & Considerations

A substitute that fails (in flavour or in legality) could hurt reputation.

Costs of change: R&D, investment in new kilns or process modifications, sourcing alternative materials.

Potential loss of brand loyalty among consumers who expect strong peat smoke; balancing sustainability with tradition will require careful communication.

Challenges maintaining distinct regional “terroir” peat flavour is tied to where it comes from. If peat sources are restricted or replaced, flavour uniformity might increase, reducing diversity.

What will you do? Wait to see what the peat-free Scotch tastes like? Or buy as many bottles as you can afford in order to try to keep a good supply of peated Scotch for you to enjoy? 

Saturday, 22 April 2023

Tesco to go peat-free on UK-grown bedding plants and compost in major carbon-saving move

Tesco has become the first UK retailer to go peat-free on its British-grown bedding plants, in order to significantly lower their carbon footprint. 

From earlier this year the supermarket started selling only compost that is also completely peat-free. Ideal for those of us who like to grow our own food.

Peat is still the most popular aid used by the horticulture industry to grow potting plants but when harvested, vast quantities of carbon are released into the atmosphere, accelerating climate change.   

The ground-breaking step has been made in partnership with one of the UK’s leading ornamental plant suppliers, Bridge Farm Horticulture, based in Spalding, Lincolnshire.  

It will also help preserve the UK’s and Republic of Ireland’s peatlands, which provide a wealth of environmental benefits as well as being home to many rare plants, insects and birds.   

The move is significant as Tesco is one of the UK’s largest sellers of bedding plants, with about 40 million plants sold each year.   

Through this change, Tesco has reduced its peat use by nearly 9,000 cubic metres a year. This has reduced the carbon footprint of these products by more than 1,200 tonnes of CO2e (carbon dioxide equivalent emissions) a year – a reduction of 75%.   

Tesco Horticulture Category Buying Manager, Alex Edwards said: “Going peat free on our British-grown bedding plants is right for our customers - we've listened to their feedback and have worked hard to prove we can deliver the same great quality, but now being better for our planet.  

“Looking ahead, we hope this approach can be adopted on a wider-scale – it’s our aim to deliver this across a broader range of plants and flowers.”

In April 2022, Tesco made the decision to remove peat from the compost it uses in its British grown bedding plant range. 

At the time a viable alternative for peat wasn’t available for young plant propagation, which meant that a maximum of five per cent peat remained in the compost formulation. 

This alternative has now been found and so instead of peat, all bedding plants, grown by the Bridge Farm Horticulture, on behalf of Tesco will use alternatives such as wood fibre** and natural by-products to deliver the quality expected. 

Tesco’s range of products supplied by the Bridge Farm Horticulture have all been successfully trialled in peat-free compost, with no impact on quality or product life.   

Bridge Farm Horticulture Managing Director Louise Motala said: “We felt as strongly as Tesco that it was an important step to remove all peat from our compost formulations.

“To enable us to do so we begun propagating the majority of our seed and cutting young plants ourselves.

“This investment in our facility and capabilities has not only helped us to deliver on this commitment, it has also given us greater flexibility and control of the whole supply chain.” 

Plant Health Minister, Trudy Harrison welcomed the move and said: “Our peatlands are an incredibly valuable natural resource. They play a crucial role in locking up carbon, providing habitats for wildlife and helping with flood mitigation. 

“Tesco’s achievement demonstrates the viability of  effective peat-free alternatives and marks an another important stride in reducing our nation’s peat use.  

“I am confident this move  will encourage other retailers to follow their forward thinking example, as we move towards the complete ban for selling peat to amateur gardeners which comes into force in 2024.”