Unprecedented €2.2bn drought response plan
approved in Spain
Package of measures will help farmers maintain
production and avoid food shortages after hottest April ever
Sam Jones
in Madrid
@swajones
Thu 11 May
2023 16.55 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/may/11/spain-approves-unprecedented-drought-recovery-plan
The Spanish
government has approved a €2.2bn (£1.9bn) plan to help farmers and consumers cope
with an enduring drought that has been exacerbated by the hottest and driest
April on record.
The
measures, described as unprecedented by the government, were
signed off
by the cabinet on Thursday. They include €1.4bn of funds from the environment
ministry to tackle the drought and increase the availability of water, and
€784m from the agriculture ministry to help farmers maintain production and
avoid food shortages.
The plan
came a day after the Socialist-led coalition government announced legislation
that will mean outdoor workers such as refuse collectors, street sweepers and
builders will not have to work when the Spanish meteorological office issues
high temperature alerts. The move follows the deaths of a street sweeper and a
leaflet delivery man during last July’s heatwave in the Madrid region.
Spain’s
environment minister, Teresa Ribera, said her department would spend €1.4bn on
building new infrastructure such as desalination plants; on doubling the
proportion of water that is reused in urban areas from 10% to 20% by 2027; and
on subsidising those whose irrigation water supplies would be reduced.
She said:
“Spain is a country that is used to periods of drought but there’s no doubt
that, as a consequence of the climate change we’re experiencing, we’re seeing
far more frequent and intense events and phenomena.
“And we
need to prepare for that by taking advantage of all the technical capacity that
Spain has accrued and developed over many years. We need to deal with episodes
such as the present one – and that requires planning, structural measures and
also, obviously, short-term and immediate help plans.”
Ribera said
promising more water was not the answer, stressing that investments had to be
made to manage demand and drive efficient use of the resource.
The
agriculture minister, Luis Planas, said most of the €784m promised by his
ministry would go on direct help to livestock and grain farmers, who would also
receive tax breaks.
He said:
“The main objective is to secure the productive continuity of our primary
sector – of our crop and livestock farmers – so that they can produce food,
which is a fundamental element when it comes to providing for our citizens, but
which is also very important when it comes to food prices.”
While the
government said it had approved the measures in response to the drought, high
temperatures and the war in Ukraine, the opposition conservative People’s party
(PP) accused it of trying to con voters as Spain prepares to vote in regional
and municipal elections on 28 May.
The PP’s
leader, Alberto Núñez Feijóo, said the government had responded too late to the
water shortage and called instead for an urgent meeting of regional presidents
and the creation of a national water authority to oversee improvements to
infrastructure.
Nevertheless,
the PP, which governs the large southern region of Andalucía, has recently
faced bitter domestic and international criticism over its plans to legalise
strawberry farms that could threaten the survival of one of Europe’s most
important wetlands.
Water
supplies to the Doñana natural space, whose marshes, forests and dunes extend
across almost 130,000 hectares (320,000 acres) and include a Unesco-listed
national park, have declined drastically over the last 30 years because of
climate breakdown, farming, mining pollution and marsh drainage.
Last week,
however, the PP regional government shrugged off such concerns – as well as
warnings from Unesco, the European Commission and many wildlife and
conservation groups – and began fast-tracking a new law that would increase the
amount of irrigable land around Doñana by 800 hectares. The legislation, proposed
by the PP and the far-right Vox party, will also serve as an amnesty for the
strawberry farmers who have already sunk illegal wells there.
While all
of Spain has been in drought since January 2022, water supplies in Catalonia
have fallen so low that authorities introduced laws in March including a 40%
reduction in water to be used for agriculture, a 15% reduction for industrial
uses, and a cut in the average daily supply per inhabitant from 250 litres to
230 litres.
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