The Prague Post - Italy's famous Po Valley rice paddies decimated by drought

EUR -
AED 4.337742
AFN 79.328058
ALL 97.071043
AMD 451.730608
ANG 2.114716
AOA 1083.104898
ARS 1731.623771
AUD 1.76976
AWG 2.126051
AZN 2.007715
BAM 1.957232
BBD 2.380042
BDT 143.874079
BGN 1.957388
BHD 0.445375
BIF 3526.781143
BMD 1.181139
BND 1.510567
BOB 8.165976
BRL 6.268067
BSD 1.181665
BTN 104.025133
BWP 15.720505
BYN 3.999425
BYR 23150.333018
BZD 2.378941
CAD 1.624008
CDF 3375.696889
CHF 0.93381
CLF 0.028585
CLP 1121.385555
CNY 8.40852
CNH 8.398409
COP 4615.810251
CRC 595.235635
CUC 1.181139
CUP 31.300195
CVE 110.344824
CZK 24.321964
DJF 210.43401
DKK 7.465085
DOP 74.092972
DZD 152.841863
EGP 56.809505
ERN 17.717092
ETB 170.594053
FJD 2.637719
FKP 0.868099
GBP 0.865852
GEL 3.193294
GGP 0.868099
GHS 14.475594
GIP 0.868099
GMD 83.268643
GNF 10248.413732
GTQ 9.058399
GYD 247.130867
HKD 9.192389
HNL 30.984152
HRK 7.532951
HTG 154.623164
HUF 389.689199
IDR 19380.608383
ILS 3.948336
IMP 0.868099
INR 103.99614
IQD 1548.006727
IRR 49666.912942
ISK 143.212916
JEP 0.868099
JMD 189.905771
JOD 0.83744
JPY 173.566669
KES 152.610608
KGS 103.288996
KHR 4736.466474
KMF 494.307502
KPW 1063.034208
KRW 1631.873262
KWD 0.360342
KYD 0.984721
KZT 638.987655
LAK 25610.743717
LBP 105820.346665
LKR 356.781117
LRD 210.343944
LSL 20.522899
LTL 3.487598
LVL 0.714459
LYD 6.388622
MAD 10.604461
MDL 19.568321
MGA 5203.808508
MKD 61.574282
MMK 2479.310506
MNT 4248.70297
MOP 9.472633
MRU 47.062045
MUR 53.458003
MVR 18.073152
MWK 2048.69938
MXN 21.665688
MYR 4.968461
MZN 75.481712
NAD 20.522725
NGN 1765.390103
NIO 43.480718
NOK 11.589074
NPR 166.439812
NZD 1.975964
OMR 0.454138
PAB 1.181665
PEN 4.124013
PGK 4.939531
PHP 67.250489
PKR 335.304499
PLN 4.249905
PYG 8432.064085
QAR 4.309099
RON 5.062836
RSD 117.165496
RUB 97.801263
RWF 1712.853585
SAR 4.430191
SBD 9.705441
SCR 17.515649
SDG 710.462965
SEK 10.928569
SGD 1.509254
SHP 0.92819
SLE 27.550082
SLL 24767.907809
SOS 675.294227
SRD 46.230393
STD 24447.201691
STN 24.517944
SVC 10.33948
SYP 15357.008259
SZL 20.516015
THB 37.453697
TJS 11.119738
TMT 4.133988
TND 3.428722
TOP 2.766345
TRY 48.77704
TTD 8.025874
TWD 35.575089
TZS 2912.337852
UAH 48.629567
UGX 4139.029228
USD 1.181139
UYU 47.463934
UZS 14587.429086
VES 189.274495
VND 31155.505571
VUV 140.772028
WST 3.261011
XAF 656.437426
XAG 0.027591
XAU 0.00032
XCD 3.192088
XCG 2.129659
XDR 0.82124
XOF 656.429084
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.020789
ZAR 20.485594
ZMK 10631.676461
ZMW 27.622216
ZWL 380.326418
  • GSK

    -0.0700

    40.23

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    15.57

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    -0.6130

    77.437

    -0.79%

  • RELX

    -0.0950

    46.765

    -0.2%

  • RIO

    -0.3120

    63.408

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    -0.4880

    71.132

    -0.69%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    23.49

    -0.85%

  • BCC

    -2.6200

    82.5

    -3.18%

  • BTI

    -0.2150

    55.815

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0550

    11.755

    -0.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0500

    16.82

    -0.3%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    24.41

    +0.37%

  • JRI

    -0.1130

    13.947

    -0.81%

  • BP

    0.2450

    34.455

    +0.71%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    24.47

    +0.08%

Italy's famous Po Valley rice paddies decimated by drought
Italy's famous Po Valley rice paddies decimated by drought / Photo: Brigitte HAGEMANN - AFP

Italy's famous Po Valley rice paddies decimated by drought

The roar of Dario Vicini's motorcycle cuts through the silence as he drives across his rice paddy to survey the destruction wrought by Italy's worst drought in 70 years.

Text size:

His fields are nothing but desolation, with rice stems slowly dying in the sandy ground.

"Under normal circumstances, I would never have been able to ride my motorcycle over the field," Vicini explained to AFP.

"At this time of year, the plants would be up to my knees and the rice field would be flooded," he said.

"Here, they're tiny, because the water needed to irrigate them has never arrived."

Vicini's "Stella" farm, located in the village of Zeme in the Po Valley, 70 kilometres (43 miles) southwest of Milan, is part of Italy's "golden triangle" of rice paddies.

Europe's leading rice-growing region -- which supplies Italy and the world with the country's famous arborio for risotto and many other varieties -- stretches west from Pavia in Lombardy to Vercelli and Novara in Piedmont.

Vicini said the area's last "decent rain" came in December.

"It's the fault of climate change," said the 58-year-old farmer, who estimates his income has fallen by 80 to 90 percent.

Enrico Sedino, another farmer in the area, is even more worried.

"If there's no more water, I can lose up to 100 percent of my turnover," he said.

Around the rice paddies, cracks are visible in the parched earth and the feeble, stunted rice shoots are covered with a thin layer of dust.

The small irrigation canals that run alongside the fields are dry, or nearly so.

The waters of the Po River -- Italy's longest river whose flat drainage basin is the wide, fertile plain perfect for growing rice -- are this year at a historically low level not seen since 1952.

The water, when it comes, arrives in dribs and drabs.

- Lunar landscape -

Zeme Mayor Massimo Saronni, a rice farmer himself for three decades, said that not only is the harvest suffering "but the whole ecosystem is withering away".

Before, the rice paddies resounded with the song of crickets and the croaking of frogs, while clouds of dragonflies flittered above the fields. Freshwater birds like grey herons and white ibises fed on insects.

Now, "being in the countryside with such a heavy silence, it's depressing, you feel like you're on the moon!" he said.

Vicini's 50 hectares are irrigated through the Cavour Canal, which carries the waters of the Po, while other rice paddies in the Pavia region are fed by Lake Maggiore or Lake Como.

But regional authorities have warned that those lakes' reserves could run out by the end of July.

Early this month, Italy's national government declared a state of emergency in five regions -- Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Lombardy, Veneto and Piedmont -- four of which are supplied by the Po.

Farmers are forced to abandon some fields to deal with others. "just like the doctor who during the Covid-19 pandemic chose those with a chance of being saved," Saronni noted, bitterly.

- 'Apocalyptic' -

The Po's historically low water levels have had catastrophic consequences for Italy's more than 4,000 rice farms, spread over 220,000 hectares (543,630 acres).

Sixty percent of the 1.5 million tonnes of rice produced in Italy each year are exported. Among the more than 200 varieties are the famous Carnaroli, Arborio, Roma and Baldo brands, essential for the preparation of typical risotto dishes.

Rice consumption rose in 2020 when millions of Italians were forced by the coronavirus lockdown to cook at home.

But now, the country risks a rice shortage, warned Stefano Greppi, president of Pavia's branch of Italy's agricultural association Coldiretti.

"The situation is desperate, not to say apocalyptic," said the rice farmer, estimating the economic damage as "incalculable... millions of millions of euros".

"If there is no harvest this year, there is a risk that many companies will close down or go bankrupt".

B.Hornik--TPP