Drought and mass tourism have aggravated the shortage of water in the Balearic Islands. Now it is going to entrust the desaliners

Throughout the month of March Let’s have a storm characterized by many rains. However, when this temporary pass will come the good weather and return The drought again. Given this situation, the Balearic Islands, one of the communities most affected by water scarcityThey are looking to get ahead. The projects. The seafore and water cycle. has announced The construction of three desalination plants in Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza. The installation will have an initial budget of 3.5 million euros and are expected to be operational within five years, supplying more than 60,000 inhabitants. A serious problem. Currently, reservoirs on the islands are 51% of its capacity, showing the water problem despite the recent rains. For that reason, from the Ministry They have pointed out That these new desalination makers are to guarantee the medium and long term water supply, regardless of the weather conditions. However, this is not all, because there are other concerns, such as overexploitation of aquifers that It has generated problems With the introduction of salts. In addition, the archipelago receives a large amount of tourism every summer, which triggers demand and Test The supply capacity. Future desalination. The Balearic Government has planned the construction of desalists financed through the STI 24-25 call, with the aim of improving the water supply in the region. In Mallorca, the Rostent area will be prioritized, especially the strip between Ses Salines and Artà, as well as the municipalities of the PLA. In Menorca and Ibiza, areas with the highest water deficit will be served. The project will take place in several phases with the construction in 2027 and the commissioning of the facilities in 2030. But they already have others … that’s how, in the Balearic Islands There are desalination plants They help meet the growing demand for water. Currently, ABAQUA manages a supply and desalination infrastructure network that includes several plants, such as Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza. To give an example, the three existing desalination plants in Ibiza operate at 75 % of their capacity throughout the year, and They reach 110 % peaks In more than five months, which shows the overload of the supply system. Inconveniences. Although desalination plants have become an alternative for water use, they have a series of problem. On the one hand, they need high energy consumption, so would imply an increase in the price of water In the long term. On the other hand, these facilities They can have brinea residue with high salt concentration that can damage marine ecosystems. So the Balearic Islands will have to continue trusting technologies such as desalination plants, which despite the aforementioned problems, offer a response to the growing demand for water. However, they can bet on the implementation of long -term measures such as Wastewater reuse or Other methods within desalination. Image | Pexels Xataka | Barcelona is about to live something unpublished for 50 months and that until recently we thought it impossible: the end of drought

The end of drought

Last year, after 40 consecutive months of rainfall below average, the Catalan authorities They decided to declare The emergency by drought. It wasn’t the first time he did in the previous two years, but as if it were. It became late and run over: therefore, during the following months we were accompanied by an endless vaodevil about Water restrictions, cistern ships, unfilling pools, river flows and transfers that They will never be done. None of that took effect. In recent months, many things had changed, but only one seemed safe: the Ter-Llobregat system, the water heart of the interior basins, was exhausted. The news Ahroa is that it seems that it has begun to change. A fact that says everything. Sau’s swamp, in the heart of the system, has gone from 7.3% to 21.3% on Monday. It is not an isolated case: Susqueda went from 38.4 to 42% and Baells already exceeds 66%. As Carlos Garfella defendssince November 2022, the Government has never been so close to being able to lift the alert in the basins that provide water to 90% of the population of Catalonia. After all, Ter-llobregat was at 14.7% capacity last year and now has exceeded 40%. Even the Alt Empordà, who had not seen abundant rains for three years, is receiving water. And what does the Generalitat say? That It is still early To throw the bells on the fly. After evaluating the figures and possible courses of action, the interdepartmental commission of the drought has decided not to withdraw any measure and opt for a “prudent” approach. And it is a successful decision. As explained by the Catalan Water Agency, from the prealert level it can be considered that The drought has sent. But, to tell the truth, if that remission is due only to a very specific episode of generalized rains, doing as everything has happened can be precipitated. But, beyond prudence, is the drought ended or not? In this sense, We have good news: at a press conference Rubén del Campo, spokesman for AEMET explained that “the long -term drought, in which Spain entered at the end of 2023 and that still endured at the end of February, will also end up reversing most likely with what it is raining this March.” Of the field He spoke of the meteorological drought and gives it almost for completed. But there are many types of drought. Or, in other words, there are many ways in which drought has damaged the country’s water systems. While the weather refers to a continued shortage of rainfall, the rest of droughts (hydrological, agricultural and socioeconomic) is understood as the direct consequence of the first in different facets of reality. However, in the same way that the meteorological precedes the rest, its recovery as well. Now it remains to see how we get back to another new normality. But let’s not be etching. Because although the future water is full of uncertainties, the improvement of the situation in Catalonia (which Until a week ago it seemed critical) It is the symbol we needed to face spring with some optimism. Image | Joan Ggk | Copernicus In Xataka |The swamps are so full for the rains of March that some face something unprecedented: unwind for the first time

The ghost of drought

A few days ago we talked about how a corridor had opened between the Azores anticyclone and Iceland depression. Moreover, we argued how Spain had many options for become the great beneficiary of that trough. Well, we sin of optimists. Just look at heaven to realize that this is never to end. What happened? In the next few days, there are two structures that walk the time of the peninsula. On the one hand, a cold front has been slowly moving through the west of the Iberian Peninsula. On the other, a Dana has traveled the south coast from the Gulf of Cádiz to the heart of Algeria. As the meteorologist Ángel Rivera explainedwhat we see is the result of the closure of that wide historical trough. And it will happen again. Right now, there is an “extensive cold storm” in the Atlantic corridorbut it doesn’t seem to affect us. Because just southwest of this, a dorsal begins to gain strength and will end up moving towards Europe. And all that without counting the anticyclonic wall that is beginning to develop between the Canary Islands and the mouth of the Cantabrian; and that, as a direct consequence, it will generate a Dana that will cross the Gulf of Cádiz and (as far as we can predict) will also go to North Africa. That is, again and again, the chances of rain arriving in Spain are frustrated. What he said: the never ending story. What time will it do? Aemet’s forecast is very clear. From Monday to Wednesday, the most important thing will happen in the Canary Islands: with very strong wind gusts and notices. Galicia can also suffer some timing, but the rest of the peninsula will only see some occasional showers. On Thursday it will be a sunny day and during the weekend we will see how that front of which we have spoken will sweep the peninsula leaving some rain. On Sunday the sun will return. In general, temperatures will be more of spring. And that is the problem. We already carry two warm winters (No cold waves or intense cold episodes) And the rain is being as erratic as usual. That places us in a complex situation: before we realize, the drought will be knocking on our door. The best example is The Sau reservoir, in Barcelona: A swamp that “despite the latest rains (…) shows a lousy state, with just 8% of its water flow.” It is a notice to navigators: the Ter-Llobregat system, the Segura basin or the Andalusian Mediterranean basins They are already having a bad time. The good weather is, deep down, a conviction. Spring for today, but thirst for tomorrow. Image | ECMWF In Xataka | We have spent centuries talking about vampires, but 500 years ago a newspaper of Transylvania warned of the real danger to the planet

We already knew that Spanish wine was on its way to collapse. What we didn’t know was that drought was going to accelerate it so much

At this point of 2025, say that Spanish wine is on its way to disaster It cannot surprise Nobody. However, it is inevitable that, reading phrases like that, let’s think it is exaggerating. Soon we examine the data, we see that the coup can become huge. Two news that is better understood together. The first is from July 25, 2024: The earliest harvest Within Jerez’s framework since there are historical records. That is to say, For more than 130 years. As the winemakers themselves said, They saw that “In July the grape was already at its optimal point (the 10.5º Baumé demanded) and that if we expected more I was going to lose weight and deteriorate.” The second news is a couple of months later: the production of wine from the United Kingdom has doubled in a very short time and, in fact, the surface planted with vines has increased 75% in the last five years. This is very rare in a place where (despite have vineyards from Roman times and produce commercially since the 60s) the vines have never been good for cold and bad weather. Both news are the beam and the underside of a huge problem: the huge impact that climate change in the main wine regions of Europe has. And, especially, in Spain. A global problem that affects us especially. Traditionally, there are two planetary areas indicated for the cultivation of the vine: the one between the 30th and 50th parallels of the northern hemisphere and that located between the 30th and 40th in the south. The problem is that, like The National Institute for Agronomic Research predicted In France, around 2100 those areas will be completely blurred with the double “very warm” days of the historical average. According to a study published in Nature Reviews Earth & Environment In March 2024up to 70% of the current wine -producing regions could face a substantial risk to lose their suitability for viticulture. In that drawer we are. In Spain, as defends happiness in Herralde, researcher at the Institute for Agrifood Research and Technology of Catalonia, towards the end of the century “the water deficit could reach 200 liters per square meter.” That is, in many wine areas “half of the rainwater that is now available in a year may be missing.” Things are changing. “I have gone from harvesting to do it in a short sleeve and always looking at the sky. My father does not remember in all his youth or a hail storm and now they come to us in September shattering the harvest and even in spring, sweeping that of that year And the next one, because it takes all the yolks “, explained in Rioja2 Berta Valgañónfarmer and producer of the denomination of qualified origin Rioja. And when we say that “time is crazy” we are not entirely aware of what it implies. As Olivia García pointed out “In winter it does not snow, (…) in February it is hot and the plants begin to sprout before but the risk of frosts extends to May (…). In spring it hardly rains and summer is totally dry.” The result is that, when “the harvest arrives so hot that the level of sugar and acidity becomes totally unbalanced.” It is not uncommon. “In a reference period from 1972 to 2005 we have found that, for example, in the Penedès region the increase in average annual temperatures has already reached two and a half degrees,” explained of Herralde in the country. Estimates are terrifying. At the end of 2022, the Reading University published a report where it was concluded that “a fifth of the United Kingdom could have adequate climatic conditions to cultivate Chardonnay grapes in 2050”. But instead, “according to A study conducted over 15 years In vineyards from different areas of the world, 90% of current cultivation areas will not be suitable within a few years. “ To this we must add the problem of water. Not only is water missing at very important specific moments, but As Jordi Pastor defendedmost winemakers already grow with an amount of water lower than optimal. As with the olive tree, the agricultural strategy is to migrate production towards irrigation and, in fact, while 20 years ago the percentages of irrigated vine Today I already touched 50%. And yet, the situation is very complicated … With the available data of the denominations of Catalan origin, we can say that sprouting and flowering are being advanced around 11 days compared to half a century ago. But in addition, “the main cycles of the vineyard (sprouting, flowering, curd, envre and harvest) are faster, those phases are shorter.” Is What we saw too Within the framework of Jerez and In the rest of wine areas from Spain, Greece, Italy or southern California. France, much less affected, too He has seen him The ears to the wolf. … that goes beyond the future. This April, Freixenet presented an ERTE for 615 workers for drought. As they explainedit was an “exercise of responsibility” to “guarantee the operability of the business” in the face of grapes due to the lack of rain. Regardless of the details of that specific case, the truth is that the labor, financial and industrial ramifications The problem is here. And he will not go anywhere. How do we do the wine? “Spain will be a little suitable place to make wine, which means that wine production will not become impossible, but it will be increasingly difficult according to the degree of global warming,” defended Sébastien Zitoresearcher at the Institute of Vineyard Sciences and Burgundy Wine. He is right. Therefore, the world of wine Work already in a hurry for looking for solutions. And the truth is that the struggle to maintain profitability is not the only problem. After all, this environmental pressure also attacks the personality itself of the wines. Can Spanish wines survive while being themselves on the way? Image | Trent Erwin | Climate Resanalyzer In … Read more

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