Faced with drought, Verona rations drinking water

Verona decided on Saturday to ration the use of drinking water in the face of the drought hitting Italy. Other municipalities on the Peninsula have already adopted similar measures, but Verona is one of the largest cities to resort to such a drastic measure.

“Due to the weather situation and its consequences on the water supply, the mayor has signed an ordinance which limits the use of drinking water for domestic purposes,” said the homeland of Romeo and Juliet, city of 250,000 inhabitants, in a press release published on its website.

Until August 31, it will therefore be prohibited to use drinking water “for watering vegetable gardens, gardens and sports grounds, as well as for washing cars and for filling swimming pools”, specifies the press release. Failure to comply with these restrictions may be sanctioned by fines of up to 500 euros.

Like its European neighbours, Italy was faced with an unusually early wave of heat accompanied by a lack of rainfall, particularly in the agricultural plain of the Po (north), hit by its worst drought for 70 years.

According to the largest agricultural union in the country, Coldiretti, the drought threatens more than 30% of national agricultural production, and half of the farms in the Po plain, where Parma ham is produced in particular.

Lake Maggiore and Lake Garda have water levels below normal for this time of year, while further south the level of the Tiber, which runs through Rome, has also dropped.

Another consequence of the drought: the production of hydroelectric energy has fallen sharply, while hydroelectric installations, located for the most part in the mountainous massifs in the north of the country, provide nearly 20% of national energy production.

This article has been published automatically. Sources: ats / afp

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