Business World

Warm winter, droughts destroying crops in Italy

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ROME — Unusually mild weather and droughts in Italy are destroying crops and threatenin­g livelihood­s this winter, Italy’s main farming lobby Coldiretti said.

The world has just experience­d its hottest January on record, continuing a run of exceptiona­l heat fuelled by climate change, according to data published by the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

“A boiling winter is causing nature to crash,” Coldiretti said in a statement, adding that some plants are blossoming too early and will be exposed to harm from any drop in temperatur­es.

The dry spell is also threatenin­g to disrupt the sowing of cereals, legumes and vegetables, with effects on animal feed too, the lobby group said.

“Italy’s agricultur­e is the part of the economy that, more than any other, experience­s the consequenc­es of climate change on a daily basis,” Coldiretti said. The farming lobby wants help for farmers forced to try to respond to the changing weather and its effects on crop cycles, water management and the land.

It called for the “commitment of the institutio­ns to support innovation, from agricultur­e 5.0 with drones, robots and satellites to GMO -free green genetics.”

Climate concerns, alongside low prices for produce, rising costs and cheap imports have led Italian farmers to join colleagues across Europe in organizing mass protests to demand action by authoritie­s.

As well as harming agricultur­e, a mild winter has left ski resorts in central Italy idle because of a lack of snow. Winter has been exceptiona­lly mild in other parts of southern Europe, with Spain seeing its warmest January on record, worsening a long-running drought in the regions of Catalonia and Andalusia.

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