2 minute read
WATER’S THE WORD
Nearly 30% of Spanish territory is currently in an ‘emergency’ or ‘alert’ status due to lack of rain, prompting Spain to beg the EU for emergency funds for farmers
WITH 27% of Spain currently either in a drought ‘emergency’ or ‘alert’, record temperatures being registered for the month of April, and an ongoing row between Andalucia and Madrid over the Doñana wetlands, there is one topic on politicians’ and Spaniards lips as we enter May: water.
Spain’s Agriculture Minister Luis Planas wrote to the European Commissioner for Agriculture, Janusz Wojciechowski, to request emergency funds to support Spain’s 890,000 struggling farm workers.
“The situation caused by this drought is on such a scale that we cannot deal with its consequences just with national funds,” said Planas.
The farming sector is being hit hard by the lack of rain and the high temperatures, and the problem is particularly acute in Andalucia.
The Guadalquivir river basin is at 25% capacity, and water allowances for irrigation have been cut by up to 90% for some farmers in Andalucia.
For now, the hot weather shows no sign of letting up. Over the last month over 90 temperature records were broken, including a high of 38.8ºC at Cordoba Airport, while average temperatures were forecast as being 10ºC to 15º above usual levels for this time of year.
Experts at Spain’s Aemet state meteoro-
By Simon Hunter
logical service confirmed that April was the hottest since current records began in 1961.
Meanwhile, last week also saw the row over the Doñana National Park deepen.
Firstly, the European Commission once again warned the Junta its plans to grant new watering rights to farmers in the area around the protected wetlands could cause even more environmental damage.
Earlier this month the PP and far-right Vox voted through legislation that could pave the way for some 800 hectares of irrigable farmland located near Doñana to be legalised. But scientists have warned that this will put even more pressure on the park, depleting the levels of its aquifer and threatening flora and fauna.
In the run up to regional and local elections on May 28, the issue has become a point of conflict between the PP and the governing Socialist Party.
“They are still messing around with something that could cost Spaniards a lot of money in exchange for nothing,” said Environmental Transition Minister Teresa Ribera, in reference to the fines being threatened by the EC over the plans for Doñana.
Want to visit Cordoba’s Festival of Patios, but don’t know how to get there, or where to find those famous courtyards? Let Sorrel Downer help
APRESIDENT of the Amigos de los Patios association once said, ‘the Festival of the Patios is to Cordoba what San Fermin is to Pamplona’.
Cordoba’s annual festival sees property owners and groups of neighbours open their flower-filled patios to the public for 12 days at the start of May – this year, that’s May 2-14.
It’s a tradition that started a century ago, and which rightly has UNESCO Cultural Heritage status.
As far as Spain’s heritage goes, for most tourists, flowers beat bulls. The historic white-walled houses with the blue pots of red geraniums have to be the most photographed
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