Tag Archives: Environmental Challenges

Andalusia’s Severe Drought Crisis: Water Shortages Grip the Region

Andalusia begins to get used to the stamp of drought. In the north of Córdoba, where in spring they already saw how the first reservoir in Spain was emptied, some 72,000 people have not drunk tap water for four months.

The alternative proposed by the administration, the water from the La Colada reservoir, was found to be unfit for consumption. So the neighbors go to the tanker truck, fill their jugs and return home with the greatest number of liters possible..

The Andalusian community is the one that is suffering the most from the drought and expects the problem to worsen in the coming weeks.

The Andalusian reservoirs stand at 21.7% of their capacity, according to the latest data from the Ministry for Ecological Transition, which notes a new decline in recent days. At the moment, up to 120 Andalusian municipalities, almost all in rural areas, have limitations on the use of water.

If there is no rainfall, the restrictions will increase after the summer and it is inevitable that weariness will begin to be felt in some sectors of the population.

On the coast of La Janda, in the province of Cádiz, the problem has been dragging on for years and is at its worst. Hundreds of unlicensed homes and businesses extracted water through wells, in many cases illegal, until the drought left them salinated or empty.

The alternative was a water transport company that was making gold in the midst of a drought, although it has recently received a lock from the administration due to the health risk posed by the uncontrolled supply in several of the fashionable Cadiz destinations.

The response of businesses and residents, some of whom have been left without water, has been to call demonstrations in front of the affected town halls and in the Delegation of the Junta in Cádiz.

To avoid this type of problem, the Ministry of Health has issued a circular to establish the bases that will allow the regulation of supply businesses in Cuba. Until now they were in a legal vacuum, but these companies depend more and more scattered or off-line coastal areas. The collaboration of the municipalities will be essential.

In total, in Andalusia there are up to 45,000 homes without a license, a problem dragged on for years that the Andalusian Government intends to solve with the new Law List.

Córdoba, Huelva and Málaga, the most affected

In any case, many Andalusian municipalities have gotten used to seeing tanker trucks on their streets this summer. Town halls such as Casariche, in Seville, have installed tank trucks and provisional tanks so that residents can fill “bottles and buckets” and have water at home during supply cuts, which are increasingly widespread.

In the Sierra de Huelva, there are towns with up to 11 hours of supply interruptions. They almost always take place at night, although in some cases, especially on weekends, they can also take place in the afternoon. The supply problems and the contamination of the aquifers, with reserves “practically depleted”, place Huelva as one of the most affected provinces.

In Malaga, for its part, there are up to thirty municipalities with restrictions. Almost 80% of the population is suffering measures of some kind, although the worst situation is in the Axarquía, a region where the Junta has proposed several hydraulic works, with the Viñuela reservoir at 8% of its capacity.

Vélez-Málaga, with more than 80,000 inhabitants, is the most populous Andalusian municipality among those affected by the water cuts. In the coastal zone, as in the entire Andalusian coast, many municipalities have chosen to cut off the water in showers or footbaths on the beaches.

Granada and Almería are free of supply cuts for the moment, while in Jaén there have only been occasional cuts in two towns. Future saving measures will depend on the drought management committees, dependent on both the central government and the Board, which will be held after the summer.

In these weeks there have been no extraordinary calls and sources from the regional administration rule out an urgent meeting in the coming weeks. In addition, they celebrate that, except for the difficulties in the most affected municipalities, in most of the territory the supply has been guaranteed even in the face of tourism growth.

The PP has been demanding more investments in hydraulic infrastructures from the central government, highlighting the actions of the regional Executive in recent months. In fact, the Board has come to propose the redirection of European funds for this type of works, which would reduce the impact of the drought in the most affected regions.

Tourism and Water Scarcity Challenges in the Canary Islands

Tourismophobia grows millimeter by millimeter in the Canary Islands, driven by the massive arrival of visitors and increasingly scarce resources. This August, there is a lack of water inside homes, but it is available for hotel pools.

A contradiction that causes a wave of criticism and reproach for what they consider to be a wrong. The question that arises at this point is whether there is availability for so many people and what solutions are on the table.

The rise of tourism is key. Fuerteventura expects to continue growing demographically and touristically, which may cause greater problems.

The neighbors do not understand why there are water cuts in places like Tarajal de Sancho, but on Airbnb you can rent accommodation with a pool for 185 euros per night. In fact, no vacation home customer talks about drought issues.

Fuerteventura has been in a water emergency situation due to the island’s council for months, and for this reason the Administration will invest 240 million in a plan to renew the production plants, according to the sources consulted.

It is a strategy for the future, given that, in 10 years, it is expected that 38% of the island’s water will be used for tourism and 41% for residents. Golf will capture 10% and agriculture and livestock 10%. And none of this convinces the residents.

The problem extends to the entire archipelago. On any day of high season there can be three million people on the total islands: 2.25 million residents, 600,000 tourists and 30,000 visitors.

Predictions indicate that, in 2033, there will be 2.5 million residents and, in 2050, three million; with which, if there is no intervention, on a winter or August day there would be four million people on the islands.

The source of water goes beyond the rains, which are not exactly abundant. This is desalinated with an electrical mesh on the verge of its obsolescence. And therein lies another problem, with a very complex scenario.

56.42% of the water that is desalinated in Lanzarote, for example, disappears in leaks because they are obsolete and in an increasingly worse state. Investment, those affected agree, is essential to alleviate this situation.

And the energy?

Fuerteventura has 120,000 inhabitants and 70% of the water consumed depends on a desalination plant located in Puerto del Rosario, at the La Herradura plant, which was launched between 1991 and 1998.

The breakdowns on the island have their origin in this infrastructure, although they have allocated 3.2 million euros to improve it. That water has to go to the south of Fuerteventura.

But there are two mysterious nuances to all of this: 29% of the water resources that flow through pipes also leak and their whereabouts are unknown.

There are sabotages to the network that the Civil Guard has been investigating since this year after a complaint from the Cabildo de Fuerteventura.

People on the island observe that the insular territory is filled with renewable energy technology and that the forecast for 2040 is that they occupy an area of 134 square kilometers.

Nereida Calero, Minister of Territory, is concerned about this situation: “We are going to defend the interests of Fuerteventura”, affirms the leader of the Canary Islands Coalition.

The injection of wind energy into the grid on the island, according to the insular energy plan, would be 241 megawatts in 2030. When that wind power is at its peak, diesel engines are expected to generate 98 megawatts of power.

Right now, in wind power there are 28.6 megawatts in the public sector, until reaching 262 megawatts of power for private sector projects.