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DPA/PA Images

Netherlands declares official water shortage as extreme heat imperils Europe's crops

Fears are growing in Europe that extreme drought driven by climate change in the continent’s breadbasket nations will dent stable crop yields.

THE NETHERLANDS HAS declared an official water shortage, as the low-lying “land of water” was hit by Europe’s sweltering summer.

The Dutch government said it was eyeing further measures to conserve water amid a drought, and authorities have already imposed limits on farming and shipping.

The country is protected from the sea by a famed system of dams, dykes and canals but remains particularly vulnerable to climate change.

“The Netherlands is a land of water, but here too our water is precious,” Infrastructure and Water Management Minister Mark Harbers said in a statement.

Parts of the country have already banned farmers from spraying their crops with surface water, in a blow for the world’s second-largest agricultural exporter after the United States.

Some canal locks for shipping have also been suspended, with salt water from the sea creeping back into some rivers as their water levels are so low, Harbers added.

Priority would now be given to ensuring that vital dykes remain safe, and then to drinking water and energy supplies, he said.

The drought was “becoming increasingly visible in nature” and it was “conceivable that the drought will affect more social interests”, Harbers added.

In July the Netherlands recorded its third-highest temperature since records began – 39.4C. A month earlier it suffered its first fatal tornado for 30 years.

European heatwave

As much of Europe bakes in a third heatwave since June, fears are growing that extreme drought driven by climate change in the continent’s breadbasket nations will dent stable crop yields and deepen the cost-of-living crisis.

The European Commission today urged EU member states to re-use treated urban waste water as irrigation on the continent’s parched farms, after France and parts of England saw their driest July on record.

In France, where an intense drought has hammered farmers and prompted widespread limits on freshwater use, there was just 9.7 millimetres of rain last month, Meteo France said.
xinhua-headlines-heatwaves-send-another-climate-warning-highlighting-need-for-green-actions A person covers themselves during baking heat in Paris Xinhua News Agency / PA Images Xinhua News Agency / PA Images / PA Images
That was 84 percent down on the average levels seen for July between 1991 and 2022, making it the driest month since March 1961, the agency added.

Britain’s Met Office this week said much of southern and eastern England had their driest July on record.
climate-uk-heat-wave A policeman gives water to a British soldier wearing a traditional bearskin hat during a heatwave in the UK last month Matt Dunham / PA Matt Dunham / PA / PA
Some water providers have already announced restrictions affecting millions of people, and fruit and vegetable producers have announced several crop losses such as beans and berries.

Britain’s inflation surged to a 40-year high in June on rising fuel and food prices.

In Spain, already parched under a prolonged hot spell, temperatures will breach 40C in several areas this week.

The heat is worsening water shortages that have dogged Spanish agriculture since last winter, with local restrictions on water usage in the most affected regions.

The government said this week that Spain’s reservoirs are at just 40.4 percent capacity.
spain-heatwave-wildfires Firefighters tackling a blaze in Cebreros, Castilla y Lyon, Spain, last month Xinhua News Agency / PA Images Xinhua News Agency / PA Images / PA Images
Juan Carlos Hervas, from the COAG farmers’ union, told AFP that Spains olive harvest from unirrigated land will come in at less than 20 percent of the average of the last five years.

Spain supplies nearly half the world’s olive oil.

© AFP 2022

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    Mute John Kelly
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 4:43 PM

    We’re swimming in it. It’s time we became the Saudi Arabia of water.

    98
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    Mute Ronan Skelly
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 6:25 PM

    @John Kelly: are you mad? If it doesn’t rain in Ireland for two days, they declare an emergency

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    Mute Eoin McLove
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 6:42 PM

    @John Kelly: presume desalination would be cheaper for countries
    than trying to transfer water all the way from Ireland

    18
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    Mute Andre le Flohic
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    Aug 4th 2022, 8:57 AM

    @John Kelly: we don’t swim in water here even if it rains very often and even if there are important groundwater resources : at the moment these same groundwater resources are not in good enough use and they are / will be influenced by any climate changes. The most important point being : how much of these waters is renewable ?
    In Canada which has huge water resources the estimate is low : only 7% being considered as renewable and most of these 7% are lost in Hudson Bay far away from the areas in need
    In Ireland it could become soon necessary to know what is really the estimate of renewable water resources even if apparently there are huge underground resources

    https://www.catchments.ie/the-impacts-of-climate-change-on-irish-groundwater-resources/

    https://www.climatechangepost.com/ireland/fresh-water-resources/

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    Mute James Bong
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 4:56 PM

    The last time I was there you couldn’t walk left or right without falling into a canal

    46
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    Mute Ciaran
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 5:27 PM

    @James Bong: couldn’t walk left or right ? How much of that bong were you hitting man?

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    Mute Eoin Clancy
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 7:43 PM

    This climate crisis agenda is going all out this summer. Non stop articles every day telling us that the world is burning up, brain washing on a massive scale.

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    Mute Alan Biddulph
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 9:17 PM

    @Eoin Clancy: No that’s just your paranoia Eoin, and your lack of education too. The Holland drought could affect us food wise, so it’s important to be informed. You are obsessed with denying the obvious.

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    Mute Derek Ryan
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    Aug 4th 2022, 10:53 AM

    @Alan Biddulph: no its because of the Dutch farmers protest that the food yield is low. No farmers no food. Also prove climate change?

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    Mute François Pignon
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 9:20 PM

    I can hardly believe “the Netherlands is the 2nd largest agricultural exporter after the US”. WOW! it is not exactly the largest country in the world. Maybe ireland could import a few dutch farmers to increase productivity here. We might have a shot at eliminating world hunger!

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    Mute Paul Moore
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 11:25 PM

    @François Pignon: As the expression goes, “if the Dutch lived in Ireland they could feed the world”

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    Mute John Staunton
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    Aug 4th 2022, 9:50 AM

    @Paul Moore: and to complete it, “and if we lived in the Netherlands we’d drown”

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    Mute Dónal MacAonghusa
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 6:11 PM

    Currently in Colombia and the Caribbean they are complaining about how much rain they are getting..

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
    Favourite thesaltyurchin
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 7:06 PM

    17m people in a space less than half the size of Ireland, below sea level with no water, the second latest Agri export trade. Baller economy tho, suppose that’s all that matters

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    Mute Allen Graham
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    Aug 3rd 2022, 8:56 PM

    Save Netherlands water by not drinking Amstel or Heineken.

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    Mute OConnelj
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    Aug 4th 2022, 3:45 PM

    @Allen Graham: just drink your own piz instead.

    1
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