The Independent - 24/05/08
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.
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Spain's drought: a glimpse of our future?
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Spain's drought: a glimpse of our future?
It would seem that the authorities in Barcelona are concerned about the misuse of water.MacG wrote:Yea, sure, it's "the climate". It could not have anything to do with increased consumption? A building boom accompanied by swimming pools and golf courses?
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 ?200m (?160m) this year. "Who'll buy a pool if they can't fill it?" Mr Sadurni asked.
My uncle lives in a little ecohouse right up in the mountains of the Sierra Navada where the population has declined over the decades, though I am sure modern lifestyles demand more water than did the shepherds of yore. The water is supplied through channels that have existed since they were built by the Moors some several hundred years ago, with each Finker taking the water for an exact number of hours before the sluice gates up the mountainside are changed so that the water catchment is directed to another family's storage well. Over the last ten years the amount of water has dropped incredibly. Agriculture is failing and property is becoming unsaleable. This is not due to swimming pools or hordes of British ex-pats, but because the climate of Africa is inexorably creeping into southern Europe at an alarming rate.MacG wrote:Yea, sure, it's "the climate". It could not have anything to do with increased consumption? A building boom accompanied by swimming pools and golf courses?
Have such periods never occurred before? The last 1000 years have been pretty variable.leroy wrote:My uncle lives in a little ecohouse right up in the mountains of the Sierra Navada where the population has declined over the decades, though I am sure modern lifestyles demand more water than did the shepherds of yore. The water is supplied through channels that have existed since they were built by the Moors some several hundred years ago, with each Finker taking the water for an exact number of hours before the sluice gates up the mountainside are changed so that the water catchment is directed to another family's storage well. Over the last ten years the amount of water has dropped incredibly. Agriculture is failing and property is becoming unsaleable. This is not due to swimming pools or hordes of British ex-pats, but because the climate of Africa is inexorably creeping into southern Europe at an alarming rate.MacG wrote:Yea, sure, it's "the climate". It could not have anything to do with increased consumption? A building boom accompanied by swimming pools and golf courses?
Why are you still worrying about the causes of climate change MacG? I thought you said the concept is already past its sell-by date?
Or is there life in the old dog yet?
Or is there life in the old dog yet?
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
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Drought? What drought?. It's pissing down again as I write this, and according to the forecast, pissing down in Catalunya this afternoon. I seem to have a typical view of North Wales out of my window rather than the Costas...
The drought situation in Spain is very varied. In Barcelona the problem is exacerbated by old, crappily maintained leaky pipework. i.e underinvestment over a long period. The situation isn't helped by a byzantine system of ownership (private, private/public and public) of the water resources and the supply infrastructure, and an alphabet soup of overlapping regulatory bodies.
Rainfall graph of the past year where I am.. No that's not a mistake. !7 inches of rain last October - by comparison London averages 23 inches per annum.
The drought situation in Spain is very varied. In Barcelona the problem is exacerbated by old, crappily maintained leaky pipework. i.e underinvestment over a long period. The situation isn't helped by a byzantine system of ownership (private, private/public and public) of the water resources and the supply infrastructure, and an alphabet soup of overlapping regulatory bodies.
Rainfall graph of the past year where I am.. No that's not a mistake. !7 inches of rain last October - by comparison London averages 23 inches per annum.
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Yes, sorry MacG - I didn't think to hard about that response with any real perspective to timescale, and was concentrating on the drama for the current residents and the near future.MacG wrote:Have such periods never occurred before? The last 1000 years have been pretty variable.
Had a lot of rain up in Leeds last summer when I was up there, and that buggered the entire city up. Couldn't get home from work, couldn't get down south by train. Proper mess, and looked like it happened again recently from what I saw on the telly.biffvernon wrote:Wow, it just shows what a benign climate we have. 17 inches in a month would bring Britain to a complete standstill - our infrastructure could never cope.
Been raining here too, for days, weeks, in fact it's been raining heavily ever since I installed my automatic watering system around the roof terraceskeptik wrote:Drought? What drought?. It's pissing down again as I write this, and according to the forecast, pissing down in Catalunya this afternoon. I seem to have a typical view of North Wales out of my window rather than the Costas...
The drought situation in Spain is very varied. In Barcelona the problem is exacerbated by old, crappily maintained leaky pipework. i.e underinvestment over a long period. The situation isn't helped by a byzantine system of ownership (private, private/public and public) of the water resources and the supply infrastructure, and an alphabet soup of overlapping regulatory bodies.
Rainfall graph of the past year where I am.. No that's not a mistake. !7 inches of rain last October - by comparison London averages 23 inches per annum.
The stats from the Spanish meteorological agency (pretty colour-coded graph on page three of this document) show that in April the rainfall in and around Barcelona reached between 50%-75% of the average figure for the last ten years, i.e. it was between 25 and 50% below the average (light orange area on the map on the right hand side). However the same could be said for the Madrid area and there's not much talk of drought here (quite the opposite). The Valencia area though (which is where you are Skeptik, aren't you?) has had between 25 and 50% more rainfall in April than the 10 year average (darkish blue area on the map).
Conclusion? I dunno, "the rain in Spain doesn't fall mainly on the plain"?
"If we don't change our direction, we are likely to wind up where we are headed" (Chinese Proverb)
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