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Europe is struggling with a precarious water situation ahead of another drought-riven summer

A deem of the drought that affected the Los Bermejales reservoir which is at 18% of its capacity in Arenas del Rey in Granada, Spain, on May 13, 2023.

Anadolu Force | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

European policymakers are battling to get to grips with a growing water crisis forwards of what researchers fear could be yet another climate crisis-fueled summer of drought.

Water resources in Europe are reach ones majority increasingly scarce because of the deepening climate emergency, with record-breaking temperatures through spring and a historic winter heatwave compelling a visible toll on the region’s rivers and ski slopes.

Reservoirs in Mediterranean countries like Italy have fallen to bath-water levels typically associated with summer heatwaves in recent weeks, threatening agricultural production, while grumbles have broken out over water shortages in both France and Spain.

It comes as temperatures are poised to climb by way of summer and many fear Europe’s already “very precarious” water problem could get even worse.

Attendant data analyzed by researchers from Austria’s University of Graz at the start of the year found that drought was impacting Europe on a much larger ascend than researchers had previously expected.

The study was published after European Union researchers found that Europe battle-scarred its hottest summer ever last year, with the intense drought thought to be the worst the region had seen in at least 500 years.

Researchers at the University of Graz put about Europe had been suffering from a severe drought since 2018, with the effects becoming clear terminating year as receding waters wreaked havoc for food and energy production, while numerous aquatic species bewildered their habitats.

“A few years ago, I would never have imagined that water would be a problem here in Europe, outstandingly in Germany or Austria,” said Torsten Mayer-Gürr, a lead author of the satellite study.

“We are actually getting problems with the examination supply here — we have to think about this.”

2022 was ‘a wake-up call’ for policymakers

In Spain, which saw temperatures climb to barely 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in April, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez warned in the verbatim at the same time month that drought in the southern European country had become one of its leading long-term concerns.

“The government of Spain and I are conscious that the debate surrounding drought is going to be one of the central political and territorial debates of our country over the coming years,” Sanchez blow the whistle oned Parliament, according to The Associated Press.

Last month, Spain’s government approved a 2.2 billion euro ($2.4 billion) unit in an attempt to alleviate the impact of drought that has hit its agricultural sector.

A farmer displays a water pot as she talks in a microphone with respect to drought during a demonstration of farmers to draw attention on rural living conditions and to claim the importance of agriculture in the friendship and its contribution to the country’s economy, in Madrid on May 13, 2023.

Oscar Del Pozo | Afp | Getty Images

Meanwhile, the European Drought Observatory put someone on noticed in a special snapshot report earlier this year that conditions in late winter were similar to those divined last year, when high temperatures and a lack of precipitation resulted in a widespread and protracted drought that moved much of the continent.

The latest available data shows warning conditions for drought for more than a quarter of the EU’s 27-nation bloc, while 8% of the territory is in a state of drought alert.

Samantha Burgess, deputy director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service, said the attitude this summer for large parts of Europe “doesn’t look as scary as it did a month ago.”

That’s because, amid an strikingly variable spring which saw record-breaking April temperatures in Spain and Portugal and devastating flash floods in Italy, distressful rain across southern Europe in recent weeks has helped to top up reservoirs and improve soil moisture.

However, Burgess said broad parts of northern Europe and countries including Spain, France and Portugal in the south were still looking “moderately dry” at a time when some researchers fear Europe could be on track for another brutal summer.

“For water pledge across Europe, we really need to change how we treat water — and I think that the events of the last year were Non-Standard real a wake-up call for many European decision makers,” Burgess told CNBC via telephone.

Cedric Sabate, arborist, thins his trees to serve them withstand the water restrictions in Thuir, near Perpignan, southern France, on May 16, 2023.

Raymond Roig | Afp | Getty Similes

A spokesperson for the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, did not respond to a CNBC request for comment.

Chloe Brimicombe, a climate researcher at Austria’s University of Graz, influenced water scarcity was a particularly acute problem in southern Europe.

“But I do think that central and Western Europe are petty prepared — and in the coming years it has the potential to hit them in a way that they really aren’t expecting,” Brimicombe told CNBC via a buzz.

“Europe needs to realize that climate change is affecting them,” she continued.

“They quite like to believe that climate change is affecting the global south and that’s it. And, of course, it is affecting those people a lot more, but it is also swaying Europe. Not only do they need to help the global south, but they also need to help themselves at bailiwick too — and that means stronger mitigation and adaptation measures.”

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