Southern Europe braces for climate change-fuelled summer of drought
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[May 17, 2023]
By Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Southern Europe is bracing for a summer of ferocious
drought, with some regions already suffering water shortages and farmers
expecting their worst yields in decades.
As climate change makes the region hotter and drier, years of
consecutive drought have depleted groundwater reserves. Soils have
become bone dry in Spain and southern France. Low river and reservoir
levels are threatening this summer's hydropower production.
With temperatures climbing into summertime, scientists warn Europe is on
track for another brutal summer, after suffering its hottest on record
last year – which fuelled a drought European Union researchers said was
the worst in at least 500 years.
So far this year, the situation is most severe in Spain.
"The situation of drought is going to worsen this summer," said Jorge
Olcina, professor of geographic analysis at the University of Alicante,
Spain.
There's little chance at this point of rainfall resolving the underlying
drought, either. "At this time of the year, the only thing we can have
are punctual and local storms, which are not going to solve the rainfall
deficit," Olcina said.
Seeking emergency EU assistance, Spain’s Agriculture Minister Luis
Planas warned that "the situation resulting from this drought is of such
magnitude that its consequences cannot be tackled with national funds
alone," according to an April 24 letter sent to the European Commission
(EC) and seen by Reuters.
CLIMATE CHANGE TREND
Southern Europe is not alone in suffering severe water shortages this
year. The Horn of Africa is enduring its worst drought in decades, while
a historic drought in Argentina has hammered soy and corn crops.
More frequent and severe drought in the Mediterranean region - where the
average temperature is now 1.5C higher than 150 years ago – is in line
with how scientists have forecast climate change will impact the region.
"In terms of the climate change signal, it very much fits with what
we're expecting," said Hayley Fowler, Professor of Climate Change
Impacts at Newcastle University.
Despite these long-held forecasts, preparation is lagging. Many farming
regions have yet to adopt water-saving methods like precision irrigation
or switch to more drought-hardy crops, such as sunflowers.
"Governments are late. Companies are late," said Robert Vautard, a
climate scientist and director of France's Pierre-Simon Laplace
Institute. "Some companies are not even thinking of changing the model
of their consumption, they are just trying to find some miraculous
technologies that would bring water."
France is emerging from its driest winter since 1959, with drought
"crisis" alerts already activated in four departmental prefects,
restricting non-priority water withdrawals - including for agriculture,
according to government website Propluvia.
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A view shows the ground of the Rialb
reservoir as drinking water supplies have plunged to their lowest
level since 1990 due to extreme drought, in the village of Bassella,
Spain May 6, 2023. REUTERS/Nacho Doce/File Photo
Portugal, too, is experiencing an early arrival of drought. Some 90%
of the mainland is suffering from drought, with severe drought
affecting one-fifth of the country - nearly five times the area
reported a year earlier.
In Spain, which saw less than half its average rainfall through
April this year, thousands of people are relying on truck deliveries
for drinking water, while regions including Catalonia have imposed
water restrictions.
Some farmers have already reported crop losses as high as 80%, with
cereals and oilseeds among those affected, farming groups have said.
"This is the worst loss of harvest for decades,” Pekka Pesonen, who
heads the European farming group Copa-Cogeca, said of Spain. "It's
worse than last year's situation."
Spain is responsible for half of the EU's production of olives and
one third of its fruit, according to the Commission.
With its reservoirs at on average 50% of capacity, the country last
week earmarked more than 2 billion euros ($2.20 billion) in
emergency response funding. It is still awaiting a reply from the
Commission on its request for a 450-million-euro crisis fund to be
mobilized from the bloc's farming subsidy budget.
The Commission said it was monitoring the situation closely.
"Severe drought in Southern Europe is particularly worrying, not
only for the farmers there but also because this can push up already
very high consumer prices if the EU production is significantly
lower," Commission spokesperson Miriam Garcia Ferrer said.
Similar struggles could emerge in Italy, where up to 80% of the
country’s water supply goes toward agriculture. With this year’s
thin mountain snow cover and low soil moisture, Italian farmers are
planning to cut back – sowing summer crops across an area 6% smaller
than last year’s planting area, according to national data on sowing
intentions.
After two years of water scarcity, parts of northern Italy entered
May with a 70% deficit in snow water reserves and a 40% deficit of
soil moisture, said Luca Brocca, a Director of Research at Italy's
National Research Council.
With the ground so parched, rain when it does arrive fails to soak
in, with devastating consequences. Authorities in Italy on Wednesday
said at least three people had been killed in floods in Italy's
Emilia Romagna region, where the rains were expected to continue for
several hours.
($1 = 0.9084 euros)
(Reporting by Kate Abnett; editing by Katy Daigle and Sharon
Singleton)
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