Vancouver Sun

Taps are running dry in Rome

CLIMATE CHANGE, LEAKY SUPPLY LINES TO BLAME

- ANNA MOMIGLIANO

I’D LIKE TO INVITE DONALD TRUMP HERE ... TO SHOW HIM WHAT HAPPENS WHEN ONE DOESN’T RESPECT CLIMATE CHANGE AGREEMENTS.” — NICOLA ZINGARETTI

Two thousand years ago, Rome could pride itself on having the world’s most advanced aqueducts, exporting the technology throughout Europe and the Middle East. Today, the city is literally running out of water — thanks in part to its crumbling infrastruc­ture.

One-third of the city’s residents are set to have their water supply cut off for eight hours every day, possibly beginning as early as Friday; different neighbourh­oods will take turns in sharing the burden. It’s an unpreceden­ted move for a major Italian city, said Giampaolo Attanasio, a public infrastruc­ture expert at the advisory firm Ernst & Young. But it may soon be routine.

“Rome could be just the beginning. If the situation doesn’t improve, other large cities will have to ration water as well,” Attanasio said in a telephone interview. “Small towns already have.”

The main culprit, experts say, is climate change. In 2017, Italy experience­d its second-hottest spring in the past 200 years, according to a report by Italy’s Institute of Atmospheri­c Sciences and Climate. Spring rainfall decreased by 50 per cent compared with the seasonal average, the same report said, and nearby Lake Bracciano, from which the city gets part of its water supply, is drying up at an alarming rate: The water level has fallen by one centimetre every single day.

Under current conditions, the lake can no longer afford to send its water to Rome. Without that supply, ACEA, Rome’s water company, says it will no longer be able to provide residents with water 24 hours a day.

“The situation is unbelievab­le,” said Nicola Zingaretti, the governor of the region in which Rome sits, during an interview on Italian TV. “I’d like to invite Donald Trump here ... to show him what happens when one doesn’t respect climate change agreements.”

But while evaporatio­n due to rising temperatur­es and the lack of rainfall account for 90 per cent of the drop, infrastruc­ture problems are also at work.

“It’s a combinatio­n of factors: climate change is the main issue, but water uptake (from Rome) is making things worse,” said Alessandro Mecali, an independen­t geologist working at Lake Bracciano, to The Washington Post via telephone.

Plain and simple, Rome’s aqueduct is leaking like a sieve. Almost half of the water that passes through its system gets lost on the way — an enormous waste of precious resources, especially in times of drought.

A certain amount of water loss is common in public supply systems: The average water loss in the United States, for instance, is around 16 per cent, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. But in Rome, that rate is now 44 per cent. Such losses are common throughout central and southern Italy due to aging infrastruc­ture and the lack of maintenanc­e, according to a recent report by Utilitalia, the national associatio­n of water providers. The organizati­on says as much as one-fourth of water pipes in Italy are more than 50 years old, and that it will take 250 years to replace the whole system at current rates.

“We had gotten to this point because [ACEA] did not invest enough in maintenanc­e,” said Paolo Carsetti, an activist for the protection of water resources. Carsetti’s organizati­on, Forum Movimenti Acqua, opposes the privatizat­ion of water supplies and has accused private distributo­rs of skipping over maintenanc­e works to maximize profits.

The country’s two major newspapers, Repubblica and Corriere della Sera, also criticized ACEA for failing to renovate its infrastruc­ture.

ACEA spokesman Massimilia­no Paolucci said that repairs already began in May, when new management took over the firm. Paolucci said the company plans to have all of its 5,400 kilometres of pipes repaired “by the end of the year.”

Repair works might help, but actually solving the problem will require replacing Rome’s aging infrastruc­ture. Paolucci said ACEA hopes to start replacing pipes next year, but “they will take a lot of money and a long time.” In the meantime, challenges from both the decaying pipes and the progressio­n of climate change probably mean Rome’s water woes won’t stop any time soon.

 ?? DOMENICO STINELLIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Water levels in the Tiber River are at historic lows due to drought as Rome prepares for water rationing.
DOMENICO STINELLIS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Water levels in the Tiber River are at historic lows due to drought as Rome prepares for water rationing.

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