Barcelona is a dry city. It is dry in a way that two days of showers can do nothing to alleviate. The Catalan capital's weather can change from one day to the next, but its climate, like that of the whole Mediterranean region, is inexorably warming up and drying out. And in the process this most modern of cities is living through a crisis that offers a disturbing glimpse of metropolitan futures everywhere.
The Independent (London), May 24, 2008 Saturday - Barcelona is a dry
city. It is dry in a way that two days of showers can do nothing to
alleviate. The Catalan capital's weather can change from one day to the
next, but its climate, like that of the whole Mediterranean region, is
inexorably warming up and drying out. And in the process this most
modern of cities is living through a crisis that offers a disturbing
glimpse of metropolitan futures everywhere.
Its fountains and
beach showers are dry, its ornamental lakes and private swimming pools
drained and hosepipes banned. Children are now being taught how to save
water as part of their school day. This iconic, avant-garde city is in
the grip of the worst drought since records began and is bringing the
climate crisis that has blighted cities in Australia and throughout the
Third World to Europe. A resource that most Europeans have grown up
taking for granted now dominates conversation. Nearly half of Catalans
say water is the region's main problem, more worrying than terrorism,
economic slowdown or even the populists' favourite - immigration.
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The
political battles now breaking out here could be a foretaste of the
water wars that scientists and policymakers have warned us will be
commonplace in the coming decades. The emergency water-saving measures
Barcelona adopted after winter rains failed for a second year running
have not been enough. The city has had to set up a "water bridge" and
is shipping in water for the first time in the history of this great
maritime city.
A tanker from Marseilles with 36 million litres
of drinking water unloaded its first cargo this week, one of a
mini-fleet contracted to bring water from the Rhone every few days for
at least the next three months. So humbled was Barcelona when prolonged
drought forced it to ship in domestic water from Tarragona, 50 miles
south along the Catalan coast, 12 days ago, that city hall almost
delayed shipment and considered an upbeat publicity campaign to lift
morale and international prestige.
The whole country is
suffering from its worst drought in 40 years and the shipments from
Tarragona prompted an outcry from regions who insist they need it more.
For now the clashes are being soothed by intervention from Madrid, and
plans to ship water from desalination plants in parched Almeria in
Andalusia are shelved until October. But there is little indication of
a strategy to deal not just with an immediate emergency but an ongoing
crisis. Buying water on an epic scale from France has given the
controversy an international aspect as French environmentalists
question whether such a scarce natural resource should be sold as a
commodity to another country.
"It would be a mistake to consider
this water bridge between Marseilles and Catalonia as simply an
operation of solidarity," said a group of ecologists calling themselves
Robin des Bois (Robin Hood). They said the commercial deal struck
between private contractors failed to consider the environmental impact
on France. The organisation blamed Barcelona's water shortage on
"wasted resources and ... lack of foresight by Catalan and Spanish
authorities".
What Barcelona authorities are fast discovering is that chronic water shortages are not a problem that money alone can solve.
Its
5.5 million inhabitants need a lot of the stuff: the 20 million
litres/20,000 tonnes/five million gallons of water brought from
Tarragona on 13 May were enough for barely 180,000 people and were
consumed within minutes of being channelled through the city's taps.
Wednesday's shipment from Marseilles was bigger, 36 million litres, but
similarly short lived.
Barcelona has churned up a whirlpool of
controversy over its handling of the water crisis, causing just the
spray of negative publicity it hoped to avoid.
Even the arrival
of rain has only made things worse. Catalonia's regional environment
minister, Francesc Baltasar, rushed to announce last week that the
hosepipe ban and swimming pool restrictions imposed in February would
be lifted. Tarragona - whose wells supply shipped-in water - protested
furiously. "Barcelona fills its swimming pools with water from
Tarragona," local headlines screamed, and the water authority demanded
a halt to pumping Tarragona's water for the Catalan capital.
Jose
Montilla, Catalonia's regional prime minister, countermanded Mr
Baltasar and insisted water-saving measures remain. "Obviously it makes
little sense to lift certain measures when, if it stops raining, we'll
have to re-impose them in three weeks' time," he said. But Tarragona
re-opened the tap only after Mr Montilla visited, and insisted that
"this effort of solidarity will supply only our basic needs".
Barcelona's
daily El Periodico called Mr Baltasar's proposal to end unpopular
water-saving measures "irresponsible and demagogic", increasing
resentments in regions supplying water to Barcelona. The shipments
themselves came under fire. Importing water gives the city a
"lamentable, depressing image" and spreads "alarmism", Miguel Angel
Fraile, secretary of the Catalan Trade Confederation, said.
With
reservoirs now filled to 30 per cent, authorities should scrap the plan
and ship in water only as a last resort, he said. But reservoirs remain
two-thirds empty, half the national average and far lower than usual
for May. These are dangerously low in anticipation of another dry
summer, raising the ghastly prospect of water rationing - painful for
residents and offputting for summer visitors.
Extreme short-term
measures might have been averted had Barcelona mended leaky old pipes
and filtered polluted aquifers, critics grumble. But Barcelona is among
Europe's most careful water users, better than Madrid, Milan or Paris,
La Vanguardia newspaper argues. Residents adapt their loos to flush
less, shower rather than bath and brush their teeth without the tap
running, but such individual measures are swamped by industrial usage,
and waste in the infrastructure. La Vanguardia urges an immediate
public works programme to improve the creaking system.
"People
are much more aware of the need to save water," says Bridget King, a
South African who settled in Barcelona 20 years ago to teach English.
"We put a bucket under the shower to catch water before it heats up,
and have stopped buying petunias that need a lot of watering. It's a
constant topic of conversation and we worry it's a long-term thing. But
as a South African I'm appalled to see people wash dishes under the
running tap. I was brought up to be very careful with water. And
although we feel relieved it's started raining, everyone knows it's
only short term and probably not enough."
Recent rains have
sharpened conflicts, offering a foretaste of water wars to come. Aragon
straddles the mighty Ebro river but is a parched desert, cultivable
only by sophisticated irrigation systems managed by an Association of
Irrigators. This ancient brotherhood agreed to sell the surplus from
its irrigation quota, which usually flows back into the Ebro, to
Barcelona as a short-term emergency measure. If rains lift reservoirs
from their emergency levels, Aragon warns it will halt supplies. But Mr
Montilla tweaked Catalona's definition of "emergency" so it didn't rely
solely on reservoir levels. Then Spain's Deputy Prime Minister, Maria
Teresa Fernandez de la Vega, ordered Aragon to keep the water flowing
"because conditions aren't sufficient to guarantee Barcelona's water
supplies".
Water is now Catalans' principle worry: 43 per cent
considered shortage the country's main problem. Authorities promise the
crisis will ease when a huge desalination plant comes on stream next
year. But they say little about how to tackle the long-term problem of
water shortage afflicting the whole Mediterranean region. Catalan
winemakers recognise that the change is permanent; some are planting
new vineyards further north as traditional terrain becomes hotter and
dryer.
Other entrepreneurs, including swimming pool
manufacturers, have less room for manoeuvre. "The authorities are
criminalising us," complained Josep Sadurni, of Catalonia's association
of swimming pool manufacturers, which predicts losses of up to Euro
200m (£160m) this year. "Who'll buy a pool if they can't fill it?" Mr
Sadurni asked.
A striking image of the seriousness of the
drought is provided by the emergence of a church from the waters of a
drying reservoir. For 40 years, all you could see of the drowned
village of Sant Roma was the belltower of its stone church, which
peeped from time to time above the surface of the artificial lake in a
valley flooded in the 1960s to supply Catalonia with water. This year
falling water levels have revealed the 11th-century church in its
entirety for the first time, attracting curious onlookers who walk
round it on the reservoir's dusty bed. Spain's Socialist government
recognises that climate change will intensify water shortages, and
favours desalination plants. One such plant, among the biggest in
Europe - and 75 per cent EU funded - is being built on the outskirts of
Barcelona and will supply 20 per cent of the city's water. But it will
not be ready until next year.
"It was already very important
when it was planned, but now with the urgent drought, it has become
indispensable," said Tomas Azurra, the chief engineer at the plant.
Ecologists
warn that desalination plants are costly in energy use, and damage the
environment with high CO2 emissions. But developed European regions can
afford them, and they're preferable to diverting water from rivers,
which critics say is even more damaging.
More than 70 per cent
of Spain's water goes on agriculture, much of it wasted on antiquated
irrigation systems and the cultivation of thirsty crops unsuitable for
arid lands. But few politicians seek confrontation with farmers already
struggling to scratch a living.
High-density tourist resorts
sprinkled with swimming pools, patio showers and golf courses along
Spain's desertified southern coast, especially in Murcia where it
rarely rains, are also unsustainable, ecologists say.
Spain
needs to capture more rainwater, says Stephanie Blencker of the
Stockholm International Water Institute, as climate change will produce
alternating extremes of drought and heavy rain. "Rain is the biggest
resource we have, and we can make it available all year round if we
have sensible storage opportunities," she said.
Since the 1992
Olympics, Barcelona has enjoyed the reputation of being both cutting
edge and user friendly. But now, as climate change overwhelms a
crumbling infrastructure, proud, autonomous Catalonia has to seek help
from outside.