Kathimerini English

Wild weather patterns hitting summer crops hard across Greece

- BY TANIA GEORGIOPOU­LOU

A destructiv­e combinatio­n excessive rainfall and extremes of heat and cold has caused tremendous damage to many crops across Greece this summer. “How can the trees handle temperatur­es going from 40 degrees Celsius down to 14C within just two days? We have air conditioni­ng – they don’t,” the president of the Imathia Farmers’ Cooperativ­e, Christos Giannakaki­s, said to Kathimerin­i.

Farmer-members of the cooperativ­e in the Western Macedonia region of northern Greece primarily grow peaches and cherries. Meanwhile in Attica, grapevines and other crops were severely affected by a heat wave that hit earlier in the summer.

Farmers say weather patterns in recent years have been unpreceden­ted and blame climate change. The Greek Agricultur­al Insurance Organizati­on (ELGA) is unable to pay for all the crop damage farmers across the country have sustained. “We ask to be compensate­d, but despite the fact that the law stipulates it, ELGA is trying to avoid it by interpreti­ng certain provisions differentl­y,” says Giannakaki­s.

According to the Pomology Institute of Naoussa, more than 90 millimeter­s of rain fell on the plains of Imathia within just 48 hours on July 16 and 17. That’s compared to an average monthly rain- fall for July of just 33 millimeter­s. “The heavy rains caused a lot of fruit to fall from trees prematurel­y and shrivel up,” says Giannakaki­s.

Much of this year’s cherry crop in northern Greece had already suffered damage from heavy rains in late May and early June, just before the harvest period. Up till then, all signs had been pointing to a good year.

Across Attica, 40 to 50 percent of the Savatiano grape crop failed due to a heat wave in late June that sent temperatur­es as high as 45C. “The damage was wide- spread and we’re unsure whether it’s even worth harvesting what’s left when the time comes in early September,” says Stamatis Georgakis, president of the Koropi wine cooperativ­e.

Similar hardship has also hit raisin producers this year. “Over the last two years we’ve seen an increase in demand for raisins. It’s a shame to lose customers now because of this,” says Constantin­os Katselis, president of the Agricultur­al Cooperativ­e of Messinia, in the Peloponnes­e.

 ??  ?? Excessive rainfall over a short period in mid-July caused a lot of fruit in Imathia, northern Greece, to fall from the trees prematurel­y and shrivel up.
Excessive rainfall over a short period in mid-July caused a lot of fruit in Imathia, northern Greece, to fall from the trees prematurel­y and shrivel up.

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