Tourist boats marooned, farm land parched as drought lowers Europe's
rivers
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[August 09, 2022]
By Denis Balibouse
VILLERS-LE-LAC, France (Reuters) - Business
for Francoise Droz-Bartholet has reduced to a trickle, just like
stretches of the Doubs River straddling the French-Swiss border that her
cruise boats usually ply.
Water levels in rivers, lakes and reservoirs across western Europe are
running low, or even dry, amid the severest drought in decades which is
putting stress on drinking water supplies, hampering river freight and
tourism and threatening crop yields.
The Doubs river should coarse through a forested canyon and cascade over
waterfalls before spilling out into Brenets Lake, a draw for tourists in
eastern France's Jura region. After months without meaningful rain, the
river water has receded up the canyon and sluggishly reaches the lake in
a narrow channel.
"We hope this drought is an exception to the rule," said Droz-Bartholet,
whose bookings are 20% lower than usual for the time of year.
She now has to bus clients along the gorge to a starting point further
upstream to a point in the river where there is enough water for her
cruise boats to navigate.
Asked how his boat tour had gone, holidaymaker Alain Foubert said
simply: "It was a lot shorter than normal."
Conditions have deteriorated across Europe as multiple heatwaves roll
across the continent.
In Spain, farmers in the south fear a harsh drought may reduce olive oil
output by nearly a third in the world's largest producer. In France,
which like Spain has had to contend with recent wildfires, trucks are
delivering water to dozens of villages without water.
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A tourist boat is docked at the end of the Doubs canyon on the
drought-affected Doubs River on the border with France in Les
Brenets, Switzerland, August 8, 2022. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
In Germany, cargo vessels cannot sail fully loaded along the Rhine,
a major artery for freight, and along Italy's longest river, the Po,
large sandbanks now bake in the sun as water levels recede sharply.
In July, Italy declared a state of emergency for areas surrounding
the Po, which accounts for more than a third of the country's
agricultural production.
As France contends with a fourth heatwave this week, many scientists
say the blistering temperatures so far this summer are line with the
increasing frequency and intensity of extreme weather episodes in
Europe.
Britain's weather service on Tuesday issued an amber "Extreme Heat"
warning for parts of England and Wales, with no respite in sight
from hot dry conditions that have sparked fires, broken temperature
records and strained the nation's infrastructure.
On the Doubs River, fewer boat tourists means fewer meals to serve
for restaurateur Christophe Vallier - a painful blow just as he
hoped to recover from the COVID-19 downturn. And he sees little
cause for hope in the future.
"All the Doubs experts say the river is getting drier and drier,"
Vallier lamented.
(Reporting by Denis Balibouse; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by
Susan Fenton)
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