The Asian Age

Vatican fountains go dry as Italy fights drought

10 regions across the country have called for a state of emergency

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Rome, July 25: The historic fountains in Saint Peter’s Square at the Vatican lay empty on Tuesday after the tiny city state turned them off as Italy struggles with a prolonged draught.

The dry basins of the two fountains by 17th-century sculptors Carlo Maderno and Gian Lorenzo Bernini were symbolic of a period of sweltering temperatur­es, which have devastated farms and forced Rome to consider water rationing.

Ten regions across the country have called for a state of emergency to be declared after Italy suffered the second-driest spring in 60 years and rainfall in the first six months of the year was down 33 per cent.

The dry spell has deprived Italy of 20 billion cubic metres of water so far this year — the equivalent of Lake Como. And there is little hope for those anxiously watching the skies in the capital: the national meteorolog­ical service has predicted small showers in the coming days but not enough to relieve the pressure.

Some 300 of the city’s famous “big nose” public fountains — so called because of their shape — have already been turned off and more will follow.

The Lazio region is considerin­g rationing water in Rome from Saturday for 1.5 million inhabitant­s for up to eight hours a day — though the proposal is being fiercely challenged by the city’s anti-establishm­ent mayor.

The rationing threat follows the decision to stop withdrawin­g water from Lake Bracciano near Rome because it had dropped to such a low level that it risked sparking an environmen­tal disaster.

Acea, the utility firm which runs Rome’s water system, has slammed the stop on using water from the lake as “unnecessar­y” and said the move left it no choice but to cut off supplies to residents. Farmers from the southern island of Sicily to the country’s northern plains are also raising the alarm. The Po river, on which 35 per cent of agricultur­al production depends, lies 50 centimetre­s lower than the same period last year.

 ?? — AFP ?? Italians fill their water bottles from a fountain near St Peter’s Square, outside Vatican City, on Tuesday.
— AFP Italians fill their water bottles from a fountain near St Peter’s Square, outside Vatican City, on Tuesday.

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