The Morning Call (Sunday)

Spain PM warns Parliament drought concerns to persist

- By Joseph Wilson

BARCELONA, Spain — Spain’s prime minister warned lawmakers Wednesday that the acute drought afflicting the southern European country has become one of its leading long-term concerns.

“The government of Spain and I are aware that the debate surroundin­g drought is going to be one of the central political and territoria­l debates of our country over the coming years,” Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told the Madrid-based Parliament.

The territoria­l tensions between regions over water that Sanchez referred to are already being seen in protests over the rerouting of water and disputes between farmers and ecologists.

Three years of scant rainfall and high temperatur­es put Spain officially into long-term drought last month.

The national weather service said 2022 was the hottest year ever recorded, when average daily temperatur­es rose above 59 degrees for the first time since records started in 1961.

The country has warmed 2.3 degrees since the 1960s, a warming that is noticeable all year round, but especially in summer when average temperatur­es have risen by nearly 3 degrees.

The Mediterran­ean region as a whole is warming faster than the global average because of climate change caused by the release of greenhouse gases, experts and authoritie­s say.

And there is no sign of the situation in Spain improving over the coming weeks.

That has led to water restrictio­ns in the driest areas.

Regional authoritie­s in northeast Catalonia said this week that Barcelona and a wide surroundin­g area that’s home to around 6 million people could enter a drought “emergency” by September unless forecasts prove wrong.

The reservoirs that provide northern Catalonia with water have shrunk to 27% of capacity. Only the reservoirs connected to the Guadalquiv­ir river basin in southern Andalusia are worse off, at 26% of capacity.

Andalusia and other agricultur­al areas are bearing the brunt of the drought as farmers lose crops.

Spain’s Agricultur­e Ministry met with farming associatio­ns and local authoritie­s charged with irrigation management in Madrid on Wednesday.

Agricultur­e Minister Luis Planas committed to asking the European Union to temporaril­y relax common agricultur­al regulation­s for Spanish farmers to help speed up financial help for the sector.

Andres Gongora, representa­tive of the COAG farmers and breeders associatio­n, said that his group urged the ministry to take emergency measures.

Spain’s forests are also suffering as firefighte­rs battle blazes that are normally not seen until the hottest summer months.

Sanchez, a Socialist leader who faces a general election in December, said that a priority of his government is to invest heavily to “help recover our rivers, improve our water purificati­on and cleaning systems and the reuse of water, and digitalize our water management.”

 ?? EMILIO MORENATTI/AP ?? A green pedal boat is tied to a dock Tuesday in a dried part of the Sau reservoir, 62 miles north of Barcelona, Spain. The country is officially in a long-term drought.
EMILIO MORENATTI/AP A green pedal boat is tied to a dock Tuesday in a dried part of the Sau reservoir, 62 miles north of Barcelona, Spain. The country is officially in a long-term drought.

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