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Copyright © 2024 CGTN. 京ICP备20000184号
Disinformation report hotline: 010-85061466
Bulgarian farmers were busy harvesting rose petals for their renowned oil this week – about a month earlier than the historical norm, due to climate change that has ushered in warmer and more humid springs.
Bulgaria, a European Union member country in the southeastern Balkans, is one of the top global producers of fragrant rose oil that is also used in the cosmetics industry.
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The best rose oil is produced in its central Rose Valley where, historians say, the flowers have been cultivated as crops since the ancient kingdom of Thrace in the 5th-3rd centuries BCE. The first oil factory was opened in 1820 in the nearby town of Kazanlak.
The process of making the two to 3.5 tons of rose oil produced in Bulgaria annually is not easy. For every gram of rose oil, more than 1,000 rose petals must be plucked by hand in the early morning – because 7 a.m. is the peak hour for essential oil content.
"Condensation forms each evening and clings to the rose, allowing the oil in the blossom to be at its best," said Miroslav Terziev, a rose farmer in the village of Cherganovo.
As recently as 1987, the lucrative rose petal harvest was in mid-June. /Reuters
Petals are also used for products including rose water, rose jam, rose tea and even rose brandy. The quality of the petals and oil is heavily dependent on weather conditions, with a combination of heat and humidity crucial, said Todor Nikolaev, chief technologist at the Terra Roza distillery.
He noted that with the recent mild winter and a very warm March, the roses began to bloom earlier this year and the picking season started about three weeks ahead of normal.
Scientists say climate change over recent decades has caused plants to start blooming weeks earlier than previously.
"We checked our archive from 1987 and found that the active, mass onset of flowering of rose bushes was between June 10 and 20. And we have roses today that start blooming a month earlier," said Valentin Kazandjiev, an agro-meteorologist at the National Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology in Sofia.
Kazandjiev said farmers facing climate change should focus on technologies that mitigate its impact, while scientists should recommend different geographical zones for different crops every decade.
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