Drought in Italy | State of emergency declared in five northern regions

(Rome) Italy declared a state of emergency in five northern regions on Monday and announced the release of a fund of 36.5 million euros to deal with the drought that has hit the Po plain for several weeks.

Posted yesterday at 5:42 p.m.

The Council of Ministers has approved the establishment of the state of emergency in Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Lombardy, Veneto and in Piedmont until December 31, the government announced in a press release.

The Italian peninsula is facing an unusually early wave of heat accompanied by a lack of rainfall, especially in the agricultural plain of the Po, hit by its worst drought for 70 years.

The state of emergency aims to grant “extraordinary means and powers” to ensure the implementation of the urgent interventions necessary to guarantee public safety, the repair of damage suffered by public and private property and normal living conditions. Population.

According to the largest agricultural union in the country, Coldiretti, the drought threatens more than 30% of national agricultural production and half of the farms in the Po plain, where Parma ham is produced in particular.

Lakes Maggiore and Lake Garda are showing water levels below normal for this time of year, while further south the level of the Tiber which flows through Rome has also dropped.


PHOTO ANDREW MEDICHINI, ASSOCIATED PRESS

A meter to measure water levels is seen on a bridge pillar over the Tiber in Rome on July 4.

The Po represents the largest reservoir of water on the peninsula, much of which is used by farmers.

In recent days, several municipalities have announced restrictive measures: Verona, a city of a quarter of a million inhabitants, has thus rationed the use of drinking water, while Milan has decided to close its decorative fountains. .

Another consequence of the drought: the production of hydroelectric energy has fallen sharply, while hydroelectric installations, located for the most part in the mountainous massifs of northern Italy, produce nearly 20% of the energy in this country.

This announcement comes the day after the death of at least seven people after the collapse of a glacier in the Italian Alps, “without a doubt” linked to global warming, according to Prime Minister Mario Draghi.


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