Dubai Telegraph - Drought forces water use rethink in Spain

EUR -
AED 4.327013
AFN 74.799506
ALL 95.44918
AMD 434.632751
ANG 2.108473
AOA 1081.398388
ARS 1641.143952
AUD 1.623621
AWG 2.120389
AZN 2.006455
BAM 1.957801
BBD 2.372845
BDT 144.81802
BGN 1.965014
BHD 0.444516
BIF 3505.710256
BMD 1.177994
BND 1.495961
BOB 8.14032
BRL 5.788075
BSD 1.178124
BTN 112.228138
BWP 15.840325
BYN 3.294595
BYR 23088.683139
BZD 2.369452
CAD 1.609658
CDF 2604.545214
CHF 0.91602
CLF 0.026856
CLP 1057.019122
CNY 8.00443
CNH 8.00103
COP 4430.341336
CRC 539.956478
CUC 1.177994
CUP 31.216842
CVE 110.760844
CZK 24.332528
DJF 209.352695
DKK 7.473182
DOP 69.678399
DZD 155.548198
EGP 62.101135
ERN 17.669911
ETB 183.954984
FJD 2.570975
FKP 0.863991
GBP 0.863393
GEL 3.151149
GGP 0.863991
GHS 13.299276
GIP 0.863991
GMD 85.993551
GNF 10339.844194
GTQ 8.991412
GYD 246.413954
HKD 9.22188
HNL 31.326285
HRK 7.535742
HTG 154.190872
HUF 355.944446
IDR 20520.06714
ILS 3.418362
IMP 0.863991
INR 112.280561
IQD 1543.397172
IRR 1545001.028178
ISK 143.608926
JEP 0.863991
JMD 185.861548
JOD 0.835217
JPY 185.065262
KES 152.020463
KGS 103.015363
KHR 4726.831334
KMF 492.401267
KPW 1060.194583
KRW 1735.562101
KWD 0.362716
KYD 0.981812
KZT 545.822523
LAK 25844.635416
LBP 105501.229303
LKR 379.491103
LRD 215.603115
LSL 19.363156
LTL 3.47831
LVL 0.712557
LYD 7.451743
MAD 10.741679
MDL 20.192811
MGA 4898.047916
MKD 61.655417
MMK 2473.229623
MNT 4213.339863
MOP 9.500832
MRU 47.042482
MUR 55.047458
MVR 18.142479
MWK 2042.905413
MXN 20.25266
MYR 4.620681
MZN 75.285788
NAD 19.363156
NGN 1607.514748
NIO 43.356155
NOK 10.814368
NPR 179.564058
NZD 1.97433
OMR 0.452936
PAB 1.178104
PEN 4.047437
PGK 5.117317
PHP 71.981913
PKR 328.199428
PLN 4.238652
PYG 7241.37073
QAR 4.304628
RON 5.203434
RSD 117.390626
RUB 86.684882
RWF 1722.975694
SAR 4.419578
SBD 9.446843
SCR 16.494848
SDG 707.384876
SEK 10.854389
SGD 1.494126
SHP 0.879492
SLE 29.037764
SLL 24701.941457
SOS 673.293895
SRD 44.061101
STD 24382.09822
STN 24.525484
SVC 10.308668
SYP 130.224809
SZL 19.357114
THB 38.04038
TJS 11.027312
TMT 4.122979
TND 3.418215
TOP 2.836327
TRY 53.443945
TTD 7.986231
TWD 36.958389
TZS 3077.508119
UAH 51.77576
UGX 4429.565099
USD 1.177994
UYU 46.968669
UZS 14304.803211
VES 588.096996
VND 31010.693043
VUV 139.683928
WST 3.188944
XAF 656.633725
XAG 0.013721
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.183588
XCG 2.123297
XDR 0.816642
XOF 656.639305
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.098838
ZAR 19.342423
ZMK 10603.360584
ZMW 22.275051
ZWL 379.3136
  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.12

    +0.04%

  • BTI

    1.8200

    60.1

    +3.03%

  • RIO

    2.8500

    108.23

    +2.63%

  • BCC

    -0.9350

    69.735

    -1.34%

  • CMSD

    0.0763

    23.61

    +0.32%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    87.39

    +0.57%

  • GSK

    -0.5650

    49.845

    -1.13%

  • BCE

    0.1700

    24.31

    +0.7%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    63.18

    +0.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.4200

    16.79

    +2.5%

  • RELX

    -0.3250

    33.255

    -0.98%

  • JRI

    0.0003

    13.15

    0%

  • BP

    0.9050

    44.245

    +2.05%

  • AZN

    -0.6200

    182.23

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    0.1350

    16.335

    +0.83%

Drought forces water use rethink in Spain
Drought forces water use rethink in Spain / Photo: PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU - AFP/File

Drought forces water use rethink in Spain

Faced with a historic drought and threatened by desertification, Spain is rethinking how it spends its water resources, which are used mainly to irrigate crops.

Text size:

"We must be extremely careful and responsible instead of looking the other way," Spain's Minister for the Ecological Transition Teresa Ribera said recently, about the impact of the lack of rain.

Like France and Italy, Spain has been gripped by several extreme heatwaves this summer after an unusually dry winter.

That has left the country's reservoirs at 40.4 percent of their capacity in August, 20 percentage points below the average over the last decade for this time of the year.

Officials have responded by limiting water use, especially in the southern region of Andalusia, which grows much of Europe's fruits and vegetables.

Reservoir water levels in the region are particularly low, just 25 percent at most of their capacity.

"The situation is dramatic," said University of Jaen hydrology professor Rosario Jimenez, adding both underground aquifers and surface bodies of water were running low.

The situation is especially worrying since it is part of a long-term trend linked to climate change, she added.

Parts of Spain are the driest they have been in a thousand years due to an atmospheric high-pressure system driven by climate change, according to a study published last month in the journal, Nature Geoscience.

Greenpeace estimates that 75 percent of the country is susceptible to desertification.

- 'Overexploitation' -

Spain has built a vast network of dams to provide water for its farms and towns.

During the 20th century, 1,200 large dams were built in the country, the highest number in Europe per capita.

This has allowed Spain to increase the amount of irrigated land it has from 900,000 hectares (2,224,000 acres) to 3,400,000 hectares, according to the ecological transition ministry's website, which calls the country's water management system "an example of success".

But many experts say the system is now showing its limits.

The dams "had their use" but they have also encouraged the "overexploitation" of water and the decline in its quality by blocking the natural course of rivers, said Julio Barea, a water expert at Greenpeace Spain.

For the scientific council of the Rhone-Mediterranean Basin Committee, a French body which groups hydrology specialists, Spain is nearing the "physical limits" of its water management model.

Spain's network of dams relies on sufficient rainfall to replenish its many reservoirs, it said.

But "the climate changes already under way, which will continue in the decades to come, will increase the risk of failures," the body said in a recent report.

Experts say the way Spain uses water is also a major problem.

"Consumption has not stopped increasing while water is becoming increasingly scarce. It's an aberration," said Barea.

- 'Europe's vegetable garden' -

Spain is the second most visited country in the world and significant amounts of water are used in tourism infrastructure like swimming pools and golf courses.

But agriculture absorbs the bulk -- over 80 percent -- of the country's water resources.

It is sometimes used to grow crops that are not suitable for a dry climate -- such as strawberries or avocados -- for export to other European countries.

Spain's use of irrigation "is irrational," said Julia Martinez, biologist and director of the FNCA Water Conservation Foundation.

"We cannot be Europe's vegetable garden" while "there are water shortages for the inhabitants," she added.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's government adopted a strategic plan last month to adapt Spain's water management system to "the impacts of global warming".

It includes measures to promote water recycling and "efficient and rational" uses of resources.

But specialists say that reforms remain timid, with many regions continuing to increase the amount of irrigated land.

"We need more drastic measures," said Barea, who called for a restructuring of the agriculture system.

Martinez shares this view, saying Spain is currently the European nation "exerting the most pressure on its water resources."

"Today there are decisions that no one wants to take. We can't continue to blindly forge ahead," she said.

F.Damodaran--DT