Italy's Green-Left Alliance (AVS) on
Saturday called on Premier Giorgia Meloni's government to
declare a climate state of emergency as southern and central
regions struggle to cope with a major drought.
In February Sicily declared a drought emergency after many
months without rain and Calabria Governor Roberto Occhiuto
followed suit on Friday due to "the serious drinking water
shortage" in the province of Crotone and in the metropolitan
area of Reggio Calabria.
On Friday an Italian Navy tanker brought 1,200 cubic metres to
the Sicilian port of Licata to help province of Agrigento and
the area of Gela to cope with the drought emergency.
On Thursday water authority ANBI had warned in a report that
"there will be no water for agriculture" in central and southern
Italy in three weeks because reserves are running dry..
The report said the situation was particularly alarming in
Puglia, Abruzzo and Sicily.
Reserves were also seriously low in Sardinia, Basilicata,
Calabria, Campania and Lazio, the report noted.
Scientists say the climate crisis caused by human greenhouse gas
emissions is making extreme weather events such as heatwaves,
droughts, supercharged storms and flooding more frequent and
more intense.
Although there are many sources of the greenhouse gases that are
causing global heating, the main driver is the burning of fossil
fuels such as oil, gas and coal, sales of which generate huge
profits for the world's energy giants.
While southern Italy has been suffering drought, the north has
been hit by the other side of the climate crisis, with storms
and torrential rain causing floods and landslides in recent
weeks.
AVS MP Angelo Bonelli called on Meloni to "call a cabinet
meeting and declare a state of climate crisis, because it is not
acceptable that, when faced with the disaster we are seeing in
Italy, with floods in the north and a dramatic drought in the
south, which is causing crops to disappear in an incredible
agricultural disaster, the answer is only his silence".
Deputy Premier and Transport and Infrastructure Minister Matteo
Salvini told a question-time session in the Lower House on
Wednesday that the drought Sicily is experiencing is a "national
emergency",
He said the government was taking "every action that is useful
to overcome critical issues that have been evident for years".
He said his ministry had completed the preliminary phase of
national plan of infrastructural interventions for the water
sector featuring around 950 million euros of funding.
He said Sicily's share was about 10% of that and "will concern
seven interventions for 92 million euros out of a total of 75
water works financed throughout Italy".
He added that extraordinary national commissioner will propose a
plan of urgent interventions to face the emergency.
This week Civil Protection Minister Nello Musumeci reprimanded
Italy's regional governments, saying only 30% of anti-drought
funding made available by the central government for them has
been used so far.
.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA