Dubai Telegraph - Europe's produce at stake in Spain's water war

EUR -
AED 3.847595
AFN 70.955217
ALL 98.129555
AMD 407.873345
ANG 1.877009
AOA 956.396496
ARS 1052.049047
AUD 1.610027
AWG 1.888176
AZN 1.778779
BAM 1.955374
BBD 2.102782
BDT 124.452883
BGN 1.956627
BHD 0.394854
BIF 3076.35906
BMD 1.047532
BND 1.403708
BOB 7.23656
BRL 6.114418
BSD 1.041483
BTN 88.395715
BWP 14.228171
BYN 3.408322
BYR 20531.622365
BZD 2.099283
CAD 1.462931
CDF 3007.463637
CHF 0.932508
CLF 0.03692
CLP 1018.737053
CNY 7.590098
CNH 7.59878
COP 4598.402514
CRC 530.489476
CUC 1.047532
CUP 27.759591
CVE 110.855692
CZK 25.335395
DJF 185.46313
DKK 7.457905
DOP 62.766923
DZD 140.965938
EGP 52.004718
ERN 15.712976
ETB 127.496637
FJD 2.382454
FKP 0.826835
GBP 0.833641
GEL 2.870045
GGP 0.826835
GHS 16.546166
GIP 0.826835
GMD 74.374398
GNF 8977.129671
GTQ 8.084076
GYD 219.097457
HKD 8.151698
HNL 26.318517
HRK 7.472315
HTG 136.711517
HUF 411.800971
IDR 16654.445463
ILS 3.862223
IMP 0.826835
INR 88.266649
IQD 1364.328775
IRR 44074.898841
ISK 145.481021
JEP 0.826835
JMD 165.915433
JOD 0.743012
JPY 161.935842
KES 135.658433
KGS 90.613407
KHR 4193.126388
KMF 494.957723
KPW 942.778181
KRW 1468.838686
KWD 0.322504
KYD 0.867927
KZT 520.016622
LAK 22876.452218
LBP 93263.459457
LKR 303.119741
LRD 189.027228
LSL 18.793764
LTL 3.093089
LVL 0.633642
LYD 5.085989
MAD 10.535438
MDL 18.996224
MGA 4861.033639
MKD 61.641022
MMK 3402.342273
MNT 3559.512841
MOP 8.35024
MRU 41.439366
MUR 49.056254
MVR 16.194626
MWK 1805.940983
MXN 21.368218
MYR 4.674611
MZN 66.947912
NAD 18.793764
NGN 1768.715105
NIO 38.322016
NOK 11.58104
NPR 140.650696
NZD 1.79238
OMR 0.403283
PAB 1.04728
PEN 3.94914
PGK 4.193126
PHP 61.827942
PKR 289.212844
PLN 4.334985
PYG 8130.3837
QAR 3.819351
RON 4.976436
RSD 117.00301
RUB 108.876923
RWF 1421.703797
SAR 3.932779
SBD 8.78204
SCR 15.752477
SDG 630.091354
SEK 11.518303
SGD 1.411093
SHP 0.826835
SLE 23.810185
SLL 21966.222062
SOS 595.175999
SRD 37.181136
STD 21681.792335
SVC 9.113188
SYP 2631.954808
SZL 18.787265
THB 36.265313
TJS 11.15323
TMT 3.666361
TND 3.327129
TOP 2.453421
TRY 36.221028
TTD 7.073459
TWD 34.008644
TZS 2775.959214
UAH 43.086435
UGX 3869.619193
USD 1.047532
UYU 44.537316
UZS 13361.088752
VES 48.47434
VND 26633.494828
VUV 124.365075
WST 2.92428
XAF 655.820364
XAG 0.034027
XAU 0.000392
XCD 2.831007
XDR 0.792243
XOF 655.820364
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.804392
ZAR 18.924922
ZMK 9429.03573
ZMW 28.770281
ZWL 337.304797
  • RBGPF

    59.2400

    59.24

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.0320

    24.672

    +0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    24.46

    +0.06%

  • SCS

    0.2300

    13.27

    +1.73%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    33.96

    +0.77%

  • NGG

    1.0296

    63.11

    +1.63%

  • RELX

    0.9900

    46.75

    +2.12%

  • RIO

    -0.2200

    62.35

    -0.35%

  • BTI

    0.4000

    37.38

    +1.07%

  • AZN

    1.3700

    65.63

    +2.09%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    6.79

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    3.4200

    143.78

    +2.38%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    26.77

    +0.34%

  • BP

    0.2000

    29.72

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.1323

    8.73

    +1.52%

Europe's produce at stake in Spain's water war
Europe's produce at stake in Spain's water war / Photo: Thomas COEX - AFP

Europe's produce at stake in Spain's water war

Spanish farmer Juan Francisco Abellaneda's salads and watermelons fill the shelves of European supermarkets winter and summer. But maybe not for much longer.

Text size:

The tap that turned the arid semi-desert of southeastern Spain into Europe's market garden may be about to be turned off, threatening the intensive farms that feed much of the continent.

Spain is the EU's biggest producer of fruit and vegetables and almost half of its exports are grown by farmers like Abellaneda, the crops irrigated by huge transfers of water from the River Tagus hundreds of kilometres (miles) to the north.

But with climate change hitting Spain hard, and three-quarters of the country at risk of desertification, the government has decided to limit the flow of the dwindling waters of the Tagus to the southeastern Levante.

The level of the Iberian peninsula's longest river has been dropping dangerously, to the point that in some places it is possible to cross its dried-up bed by foot in summer.

Just like Egypt's shrinking Nile and the Tigris in Iraq, the right to draw on the waters of the Tagus -- which crosses into Portugal before flowing into the Atlantic -- has become a political hot potato.

The debate is getting even more heated in the run up to regional elections later this month, with the intensive agriculture that is a pillar of the Spanish economy called into question.

"We need the water (from the Tagus). If they take it from us, it will be nothing but a desert here," said Abellaneda.

- 'What are we going to live on?' -

The 47-year-old cast an anxious eye over the dusty drills of broccoli growing on his 300 hectares (740 acres) near Murcia.

Despite another abnormally hot and dry spring, the farm he and his brothers run is thriving, exporting 3,000 tonnes of fruit and vegetables a year.

In his father and grandfather's time, Murcia was one of the poorest parts of Spain, a land of subsistence farmers. Greenhouses and hi-tech storage depots now stretch to the horizon.

"If they do not bring us the water, what are we going to live on?" asked Abellaneda, a founder member of the Deilor cooperative which employs 700 people.

He does not want to turn the clock back and fears widespread job losses if they lose water.

"The region is one of the most arid" in Spain, said Domingo Baeza, professor of river ecology at the Autonomous University of Madrid, with not enough water of its own for its intensive agriculture.

To make the bone-dry southeast bloom, Spain began building the gigantic Tagus-Segura Water Transfer project under the dictator General Franco in 1960. It took nearly 20 years to complete its 300 kilometres of canals, tunnels, aqueducts and reservoirs, bringing billions of litres of water from the Tagus south into the Segura basin between Murcia and Andalusia.

Once hailed as a model in handling drought, it is now accused of making them worse.

It also made the Levante region -- which includes the dry provinces of Murcia, Alicante and Almeria -- Europe's biggest horticultural hotspot, employing 100,000 people in businesses turning over three billion euros ($3.3 billion) a year.

- Rivers drying up -

But today "the Tagus is suffering", said Baeza. "It is degraded in numerous places... because we have far outstripped its capacity (with) uncontrolled expansion of the land it irrigates."

Since the Transfer project was built, Spain's average temperature has shot up by 1.3 degrees Centigrade (more than two degrees Fahrenheit), according to the Spanish meteorological service.

The flow of the Tagus has dropped 12 percent over the same period and could plummet by up to 40 percent by 2050, the Spanish government estimates.

Extreme heatwaves over the last few years, sometimes very early in the year -- with temperature records again broken last week -- have dried up rivers and reservoirs and have led to water cuts.

"Global warming has changed things," said Julio Barea of Greenpeace. The Transfer "no longer works" for Spain. "The Tagus needs the water (it is losing to farms in the southeast) to survive," he insisted.

In the central Castile-La Mancha region, where the Tagus' water is syphoned away south, the effects of losing so much water have been visible for years.

"Our land has been sacrificed" for the farmers of the Levante, declared Borja Castro, Socialist mayor of Alcocer, a village near the Entrepenas and Buendía reservoirs, whose water is pumped to the southeast.

Known as the "Sea of Castile" for the artificial lakes that were created by the damming of the Tagus in the 1950s, it used to attract lots of tourists who would come for the weekend to swim, boat and eat in its restaurants.

"It was really lively," recalled Borja's father, Carlos Castro, 65, pointing to the ruins of a cafe near a spot where he would come to swim as a teenager. Now "it's like a desert," he sighed.

- 'Food security at risk' -

The beaches where tourists once lounged have disappeared with the lake water now several dozen metres below where it was.

"Everything stopped when the damned water transfers started," said mayor Castro, who wants them to be stopped completely. "With our water went businesses, jobs and a part of our population.

"They turned the Levante into the garden of Europe, but with water that came from somewhere else. It's madness."

Madrid wants to reduce the water transfers by a third -- except in times of abundant rainfall -- to bring the Tagus's level up.

But without that water, the southeast "will not be able to maintain modern and competitive agriculture," which could put Europe's food security at risk, warned Alfonso Galvez, a head of the farmers' union, Asaja.

The cut could lead to 12,200 hectares of arable land being abandoned, claimed the SCRATS farmers lobby group. The economic cost would also be colossal, it argued, up to 137 million euros a year, with 15,000 jobs lost.

- 'It's just not tenable' -

The political battle over the water in the lead-up to this month's elections has created some strange bedfellows.

The Socialist-held region of Valencia in the east has allied itself with Murcia, run by the conservatives of the Popular Party, to try to stop any cuts. Socialist Castile-La Mancha, meanwhile, is backing the government's decree with the help of local right-wingers.

The left-wing government of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said it has no choice but to cut the flow to come into line with rulings from Spain's supreme court and EU environmental rules, which demand protection plans for water basins.

Minister for Ecological Transition Teresa Ribera said the decision was based on "the best scientific knowledge possible", and has promised more money to develop other sources of water.

The government is keen on desalination, which is already going on the Levante, but on a relatively small scale.

But many farmers are not convinced. Galvez said desalinated water lacks nutrients and has "a big environmental impact because "you need lots of electricity to make it" as well as its harmful effects on the marine ecosystem.

The conservative head of the Murcia region, Fernando Lopez Miras, is equally sceptical. He said the costs were prohibitive -- three to four times more than transporting the water from the Tagus. "They are talking about a price of around 1.4 euros a litre. That's the price of petrol!"

The farmers have a right to the water, he argued, because the constitution decreed that "Spain's water belongs to all Spaniards". Desalination plants were at best a help, not "an alternative" water source.

For environmentalists, Spain's whole agricultural model has to be rethought. "More than 80 percent of freshwater in Spain is used by agriculture... it's just not tenable," said Barea of Greenpeace.

There has to be a drastic reduction in the amount of land given over to intensive farming if Spain is to avoid disaster, he said. "Spain cannot be the garden of Europe if our water is getting more and more scarce."

W.Darwish--DT