Windsor Star

One of worst droughts in decades devastates South Europe crops

- ISLA BINNIE AND PAUL DAY

ROME Italian durum wheat and dairy farmer Attilio Tocchi saw warning signs during the winter of the dramatic drought to come at his holding just over a kilometre from the Tuscan coast.

“When it still hadn’t rained at the beginning of spring we realized it was already irreparabl­e,” he said, adding that he had installed fans to try to cool his cows that were suffering in the heat.

Drought in southern Europe threatens to reduce cereal production in Italy and parts of Spain to its lowest level in at least 20 years, and hit other regional crops including olives and almonds.

Castile and Leon, the largest cereal growing region in Spain, has been particular­ly badly affected, with crop losses estimated at around 60 to 70 per cent.

“This year was not bad, it was catastroph­ic. I can’t remember a year like this since 1992 when I was a little child,” said Joaquin Antonio Pino, a cereal farmer in Sinlabajos, Italy.

Pino said many of his fields had not even been harvested, because crop revenues would not cover the wages of labourers.

While the EU is collective­ly a major wheat exporter, Spain and Italy both rely on imports from countries including France, Britain and Ukraine.

Spanish soft wheat imports are expected to rise by more than 40 per cent to 5.6 million tonnes in the 2017-18 marketing year, according to Agroinfoma­rket.

The drought has helped support EU wheat futures, which have risen around six per cent since the beginning of June, although the prospect of a larger harvest in France this year should ensure adequate overall supplies in the trading bloc.

Spain and Italy are also among the world’s top producers of olive oil. Production in both countries is expected to fall, but the decline is likely to be particular­ly steep in Italy, where drought is the latest headache for olive growers already plagued by insects and a bacterial disease in recent years. A 60-per-cent drop in Italian output is forecast by the Internatio­nal Olive Council.

“We expected good production this year, but it hasn’t turned out like that,” said Francesco Suatoni, who tends about 4,000 olive trees on the fringe of the ancient town of Amelia, in Umbria, central Italy.

Other crops have been damaged, and Italy’s agricultur­al group Coldiretti has estimated the drought could cost the nation’s farmers more than one billion euros.

“The drought is affecting, to a greater or lesser extent, all crops in Spain, even those that rely on greenhouse­s, because there’s a limit on the amount of water available,” said Jose Ugarrio, analyst at the Spanish young farmers’ associatio­n.

The production of nuts such as almonds and pistachios has also fallen sharply. “We expect a 23 per cent drop in almond production this year from last year,” Ugarrio said.

Some see rising temperatur­es as a long-term trend, which threatens the viability of farming in the region.

Some scientists have said heat waves like this year’s are becoming more frequent, and are linked to man-made climate change.

 ?? MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Po riverbed dried up in northern Italy in the wake of severe drought and a heat wave last month.
MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES The Po riverbed dried up in northern Italy in the wake of severe drought and a heat wave last month.

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