Spain’s Rías Baixas wine region is considering (in Spanish) measures to limit grape production after a record 2025 harvest coincided with a sharp drop in wine consumption, leaving wineries with surplus stock and putting pressure on prices. Industry leaders are discussing a temporary halt to new vineyard plantings and possible adjustments to the maximum yield allowed per hectare in order to better match supply with weaker demand. The article argues that the downturn is being driven mainly by changing consumer habits and declining global wine consumption rather than tariffs, making production control a key strategy for protecting growers and wineries.