The drought in the Po River Valley threatens more than 30% of national agricultural production, including tomato sauce, fruit, vegetables and wheat.
“The drought in the Po River Valley threatens more than 30 per cent of national agricultural production, including tomato sauce, fruit, vegetables and wheat and half of the livestock of the country,” agricultural lobby Coldiretti said in a statement. “If the dry conditions continue, farmers will be forced to provide water with emergency irrigation.”
NATURE
The longest river in Italy is drying up. What
does this mean for those who rely on it for food?
By Rebecca
Ann Hughes • Updated: 20/06/2022
Last month,
residents of Boretto in northern Italy discovered that the wide stretch of the
Po River, running just to the north of their small town, had transformed into a
beach.
The pale
golden sand extended for around 10 metres towards the centre of the river and
inhabitants took advantage of the newly formed terrain to take a stroll and
walk their dogs.
In other
areas, the water level dropped so low that the remains of a tank from WWII were
revealed and the ruined walls of a medieval town emerged.
The Po is
the longest river in Italy.
At a
monitoring station in Boretto, Alessio Picarelli, head of the Interregional
Body of the Po River (AIPO), received results that the Po was measuring 2.9
metres below the zero gauge height, drastically below the seasonal average.
A vital water source is at risk
Italy’s Po River flows some 650km from the snowy Alps
in the northwest to the wild Po Delta in the east before rushing out into the
Adriatic Sea.
During its
course, the great waterway nourishes the expansive fertile plains of northern
Italy where farmers have thrived for generations. Dubbed Italy’s breadbasket,
these flatlands covered with crops are responsible for some 40 per cent of
Italy's GDP.
At the
moment, however, the normally life-giving waters of the Po River have suddenly
become an unexpected threat. The dramatically low water levels of the river
have been causing seawater to be sucked back upstream.
It is a serious problem for the biodiversity here,
drying out the ditches and waterways.
Giancarlo
Mantovani
Down in the
Po Delta near the mouth of the river, Giancarlo Mantovani, director of a consortium
that safeguards the regional park, explains that the water level here is higher
than further upstream.
“This is
because the vacuum left by the lack of river water is being filled by
seawater,” he says, which can be seen flowing back upstream in some areas. For
farmers in the area, it means saltwater seeping into the earth and poisoning
crops, which are blackened and wilting.
“It is a
serious problem for the biodiversity here, drying out the ditches and
waterways,” Mantovani says.
The River Po is drying up in Italy, with disastrous
consequences for locals.Rebecca Ann Hughes
This is a sign of climate change
These record-low water levels, which the AIPO would
normally only measure in August, are partly a result of the lack of rainfall
that northern Italy has been suffering.
“Normally
it should rain once every one or two weeks,” says Mantovani, “but now it hasn’t
rained for three months.”
The
problems start, however, in the mountains, where snowfall has been at its
lowest for 20 years measuring 50 per cent less than the seasonal average. The
glaciers of the Alps, which act as reservoirs to feed the river, are also
shrinking each year. On Monte Viso, a mountain close to the French border where
the Po River originates, the permafrost is melting and causing chunks of rock
to crumble away.
The
situation has set alarm bells ringing about the effects climate change could
have on an area so heavily dependent upon the river’s waters.
This season
has already been a stark warning that the warming planet may turn Italy's
fertile farmlands and nutrient-rich Delta into a salty wasteland, while putting
hundreds of thousands of livelihoods at risk. “It is a 360-degree disaster,”
says Mantovani.
A summer
water crisis
The low
levels of the Po River are particularly worrying as, until recently, farmers
had not even begun to extract the water for irrigating their crops.
Global
warming now means that the period when water from the river is required for
crops has been extended, beginning as early as March and ending in September.
With a hot
and sunny spring underway, farmers have begun pumping the water but, as some
have discovered, what they are extracting at the moment is full of salt. It is a
vicious cycle too, as with farmers now drawing water, the level of the river
may continue to drop unless the weather changes soon, causing water shortages.
The drought in the Po River Valley threatens more than
30% of national agricultural production, including tomato sauce, fruit,
vegetables and wheat.
“The drought in the Po River Valley threatens more
than 30 per cent of national agricultural production, including tomato sauce,
fruit, vegetables and wheat and half of the livestock of the country,” agricultural
lobby Coldiretti said in a statement. “If the dry conditions continue, farmers
will be forced to provide water with emergency irrigation.”
Rethinking
the river’s role in Italy
Rather than
seeing the Po River as just a vast reservoir to exploit, experts are calling
for urgent protection and preservation of the waterway as an ecological system.
Farmers currently use water jets to irrigate crops which results in a large
amount of the water lost through evaporation.
Instead,
Legambiente, a national environmental association, is urging farmers to use
pipes laid in the ground to carry the water - which would cause less to be
wasted.
Coldiretti
is pushing for rainwater to be harnessed instead of river water for
agricultural use.
"In a
country with about 300 billion cubic metres of water falling annually, but
which, due to infrastructural deficiencies, only retains 11 per cent of it,
maintenance, saving, recovery and recycling of water are required,” the lobby
said. “We are appealing for the bodies in charge to develop a water management
project by activating a network of reservoirs in the area.”
The town is
pioneering a method of reducing dependence on the waters of the Po by recycling
water from sewage.
The town of
Reggio Emilia is pioneering a method of reducing dependence on the waters of the
Po by recycling water from sewage. It now generates 5 million cubic metres of
water to irrigate farmland with this technique.
In the
Delta, Mantovani’s consortium has installed two barriers in branches of the
river to prevent the uptake of saltwater from the sea. “These barriers are
allowing us to deviate the seawater and create reserves with the little
freshwater arriving from the mountains,” he says.
This is
being collected in vats and canals - to be used in moments when there may be
only saltwater in the Delta, a very real possibility.
With little
rainfall on the horizon for the next few weeks, Mantovani also explains the
most immediate and vital course of action is that everyone using the water from
the river reduces their consumption.
“If there
is no water, everyone throughout the river’s course must play their part to
lower their usage,” he says.



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