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Risotto crisis: the fight to save Italy’s beloved dish from extinction

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For most of winter and spring in 2022, Luigi Ferraris, a 58-year-old rice farmer from Mortara, a town in the Po valley, remained hopeful. Rainfall had been down 40% in the first six months of the year, and snow had accumulate­d thinly in the Alps, prompting an 88% drop in the amount of water coming to the Po River from snow-melt; flow in the river and its connected canals was at a historic low.

But Ferraris believed things would soon return to normal. “I thought the lack of water would be temporary,” he says.

Historical­ly, access to water had never been an obstacle in this lowland. It lies at the heart of the Po valley, or Pianura Padana, a floodplain in northern Italy where large swaths of land were originally swamps and a hotbed of malaria. For centuries, local farmers fought to push back the water, constructi­ng drainage and levelling land to slowly transform the wetlands into crop fields and paddies.

“In this area, the problem has always been to keep the water away,” says Alberto Lasagna, director of Confagrico­ltura Pavia, a local branch of the General Confederat­ion of Italian Agricultur­e. “It has never been the other way around.”

The River Po with rice fields stretching across the valley. All Photograph­s: Marco Massa and Haakon Sand/ the Guardian

Ferraris realised the full extent of what he was about to lose only at the end of May 2022, when his rice fields had not turned their usual luxuriant green. “They were all brown,” he says. “It all looked like dry straw.”

In his 37 years running the rice farm that he inherited from his grandfathe­r, Ferraris had never seen anything like it. He lost more than half of his harvest and he wasn’t alone.

Italy is Europe’s largest rice producer, growing about 50% of the rice produced in the EU. Most of its rice fields are in the Po valley, which stretches across much of the north of the country. It is in these fields that the unique risotto rice varieties, such as carnaroli and arborio, are grown.

The inside of a rice plant about to flower. With global heating, farmers fear extreme weather events such as drought will become more frequent

In 2022, the worst drought in 200 years hit the Po, Italy’s longest river.

The waterway forms the lifeblood of a complex web of canals built between the Middle Ages and the 1800s, which serve as the paddy fields’ main source of irrigation. That year, Italy lost 26,000 hectares (64,000 acres) of rice fields, according to Ente Nazionale Risi, the national rice authority, and rice production dropped by more than 30%. Last year, the drought persisted and the crop from another 7,500 hectares of rice fields was lost.

Today, rice farmers struggling to recover from the impact of the drought face an uncertain future. “The higher the temperatur­es, the more frequent and intense these extreme events will be,” says Marta Galvagno, a biometeoro­logist at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency of Aosta Valley.

Biometeoro­logist Marta Galvagno at work

Every month, Marta climbs a tower 2,200 metres up on the Italian side of the Matterhorn to collect data from instrument­s such as the eddy covariance sensor, left, used to assess the impact of the climate crisis

Over the past two years, Ferraris, like other farmers in the area, has tried to diversify his crops to reduce the risks brought by the climate crisis. He has reduced the acreage dedicated to paddies and started to grow crops such as maize, that require less water.

“The climate is changing and I am afraid there will be other droughts,” says Ferraris, whose farm lost about €150,000 [£129,000] in 2022. Rice remains his biggest crop, however. Recently, he has started monitoring snowfalls in the Alps and checking the water levels in Lake Maggiore every day. “It’s hard to sleep at night,” he says.

Ferraris is particular­ly worried about the production of carnaroli classico, a refined rice variety. Thanks to its ability to resist high cooking temperatur­es and absorb flavours, carnaroli is considered the “king of risotto”, but it is also extremely delicate and vulnerable to changes in the climate.

Antonio is an acquaiolo (water man). His job is to check and adjust the water level for the rice crops

Antonio uses a system of floodgates and the natural terrain to adjust water levels; a gauge measures levels in the Cavour canal in Chivasso, near Turin. The canal, dating from 1852, helps to regulate water feeding the Po

Last year, after the husking and whitening process, only 38% of Ferraris’ carnaroli classico harvest was marketable. “Because of the drought, rice [grains] often split,” he says.

Giovanni Pochettino, a farmer in the Unesco-recognised Collina Po natural reserve, less than a kilometre from the banks of the river, also grows carnaroli and shares Ferraris’ concerns.

“We’re having more and more challenges producing carnaroli rice, as it suffers from the August heat,” says Pochettino. “These rice varieties were developed almost 100 years ago, when the temperatur­es were completely different.”

Pochettino has been thinking about quitting the production of carnaroli, the quality of which he compares to a fine wine. “The margins are low,” he says, adding that rice mills that buy his crop require perfect grains. “The financial return doesn’t reflect all the hard work needed to grow this type of rice.”

Giovanni Pochettino preparing to fertilise his carnaroli crop. He is considerin­g quitting the crop as the returns don’t reflect the farmers’ efforts

Filip Haxhari, a researcher at Ente Nazionale Risi, says that, because of the prolonged drought, carnaroli production fell by 50% in 2022, threatenin­g a unique rice variety. “Only carnaroli and other similar varieties have a varietal genetic trait that allows them to absorb seasoning, aroma and condiments and to create traditiona­l risotto,” he says. “It’s different from all other rice varieties in the world.”

Francesco Avanzi, a hydrologis­t at the Internatio­nal Centre for Environmen­tal Monitoring (Cima) research foundation, explains that the 2022 Po drought was mainly caused by high temperatur­es and low snowfalls in the Alps. Almost two-thirds of all the water that flows into the Po throughout the year comes from melting Alpine snow.

“The snow usually melts down very slowly between April and June and this allows it to permeate very efficientl­y into the ground,” says Avanzi. Melted snow is particular­ly important in summer, replenishi­ng the river when rainfall is low.

“Thanks to this slow release of snow water, rice farmers know that river flows will be consistent­ly high between May and July,” Avanzi says.

Hydrologis­t Francesco Avanzi looks over at a glacier plateau in the Aosta valley. His research involves the water cycle and mathematic­al models for climate forecastin­g

In 2022, snow water resources in the Alps dropped by about 60% from the previous decade’s median. “Winter 2021-2022 was the worst but 2023 was similar,” says Avanzi. According to the latest data from Cima, in February the snow water resources fell by 63%. “It doesn’t look particular­ly rosy,” says Avanzi.

In recent years, an increasing number of rice farmers in northern Italy have adopted “dry sowing” of rice, a technique that uses less irrigation water and labour, but that, counterint­uitively, also contribute­s to increasing­ly drier soil, according to some experts. “The water that was used to flood the rice fields didn’t go to waste,” says Lasagna. “It permeated the soil and went back to the river.”

Haxhari and his team are working to develop new rice varieties that require less water and are more resistant to changes in the climate. “The 2022 drought was heartbreak­ing, I’d never seen so many plants die in such large numbers,” says Haxhari, a researcher for more than 40 years. “But it provided a key opportunit­y for research.”

The events allowed scientists to test nuovoprome­teo, a drought-resistant new rice variety that’s now on the market.

A scientist testing the yield of a rice variety – the amount of usable product after the refinement process

From left: a researcher in the experiment­al rice fields at Ente Nazionale Risi; various types of rice plants: drought-resistant varieties have more vertical roots that go further into the ground to find water

Nuovo prometeo is not suitable for cooking risotto, however, and while Haxhari says his team aims to develop new varieties that will do justice to the traditiona­l dish, Ferraris remains sceptical that small rice producers like him, who focus on a high quality product, will benefit from these new varieties. “If we want to get the clients, we need to focus on high-quality products,” he says.

Water consumptio­n also remains a concern. In 2022, Ferraris’ rice farm suffered a 90% water reduction. “We’re talking about rice,” says Ferraris. “You still need water to grow it.”

The recent drought was probably aggravated by infrastruc­ture failures. Research by Italy’s national statistics bureau Istat found that, due to structural leaks, in 2020 the country’s aqueducts lost 42% of the water they carried. Climate and agricultur­e experts say that new systems to store water, and steps to optimise the existing supply network, are crucial to mitigate the effects of future droughts.

“If we implement mitigation and adaptation strategies, we can still avoid a catastroph­e,” says Galvagno. “As scientists, we’ve really said all there is to say. What’s missing now is economic investment and a political will to implement these strategies.”

A researcher’s boots are hung out to dry after a day at work in the paddies

ality that even machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce models with limited direct exposure to sensitive data or datasets containing illicit data may still be misused to create illegal content, such as ‘synthetic’ child sexual abuse material and sexual deepfakes.”

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But tech companies including Microsoft, Meta and Stability AI saidtheir technologi­es were being developed with guardrails in place to prevent them being used in such a way.

Microsoft warned that the standards, as drafted, could limit the effectiven­ess of AI safety models being used to detect and flag child abuse or proterror material.

“To ensure that AI models and safety systems (such as classifier­s) can be trained to detect and flag such content requires that the AI is exposed to such content and evaluation processes are put in place to measure and mitigate risks,” Microsoft said.

“Entirely ‘clean’ training data may reduce the effectiven­ess of such tools and reduce the likelihood they operate with precision and nuance.

“One of the most promising elements of AI tooling for content moderation is advanced AI’s ability to assess context – without training data that supports such nuanced assessment, we risk losing the benefits of such innovation.”

Stability AI similarly warned that AI would play a large role in online moderation, and overly broad definition­s could make it harder to determine what must be picked up in order to comply with the proposed standards.

Facebook’s parent company Meta said while its Llama 2 model had safety tools and responsibl­e use guides, it would be difficult to enforce safeguards when the tool is downloaded.

“It is not possible for us to suspend provision of Llama 2 once it has been downloaded nor terminate an account, or to deter, disrupt, detect, report or remove content from models that have been downloaded,” the company said.

Google recommende­d that AI not be included in the standards and instead be considered wholly as part of the current government review of the

Online Safety Act and the Basic Online Safety Expectatio­ns.

The tech companies also echoed comments made by Apple last week that the standards must explicitly state that proposals to scan cloud and message services “where technicall­y feasible” will not compromise encryption, and technical feasibilit­y will cover more than simply the cost to a company to develop such technology.

In a statement, Inman Grant said the standards would not require industry to break or weaken encryption, monitor texts or indiscrimi­nately scan large amounts of personal data, and the commission­er was now considerin­g potential amendments to clarify this point.

“Fundamenta­lly, eSafety does not believe industry should be exempt from responsibi­lity for tackling illegal content being hosted and shared freely on their platforms. eSafety notes some large end-to-end encrypted messaging services are already taking steps detect this harmful content,” she said.

Final versions of the standards will be tabled in parliament for considerat­ion later this year, Inman Grant said.

 ?? ?? A mondina – a seasonal female worker in the paddy fields – weeding the rice crop Photograph: Marco Massa and Haakon Sand/for The Guardian
A mondina – a seasonal female worker in the paddy fields – weeding the rice crop Photograph: Marco Massa and Haakon Sand/for The Guardian
 ?? ?? The River Po with rice fields stretching to the horizon. All Photograph­s: Marco Massa and Haakon Sand/the Guardian
The River Po with rice fields stretching to the horizon. All Photograph­s: Marco Massa and Haakon Sand/the Guardian
 ?? ?? New Australian online safety standards cover a variety of technologi­es, including generative AI. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
New Australian online safety standards cover a variety of technologi­es, including generative AI. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

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