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

EUR -
AED 4.254069
AFN 76.819605
ALL 96.692408
AMD 441.601542
ANG 2.073526
AOA 1062.215372
ARS 1680.635222
AUD 1.771205
AWG 2.087942
AZN 1.969585
BAM 1.955798
BBD 2.333588
BDT 141.579883
BGN 1.954841
BHD 0.436698
BIF 3421.867636
BMD 1.158359
BND 1.503886
BOB 8.006028
BRL 6.205911
BSD 1.158509
BTN 103.473361
BWP 16.574699
BYN 3.95798
BYR 22703.837267
BZD 2.330188
CAD 1.625177
CDF 2548.389993
CHF 0.93274
CLF 0.027383
CLP 1074.238979
CNY 8.201645
CNH 8.191967
COP 4338.784387
CRC 577.59703
CUC 1.158359
CUP 30.696515
CVE 110.265385
CZK 24.170262
DJF 206.318939
DKK 7.468329
DOP 72.579627
DZD 151.058149
EGP 55.179478
ERN 17.375386
ETB 178.800881
FJD 2.633935
FKP 0.875834
GBP 0.875059
GEL 3.12753
GGP 0.875834
GHS 13.006045
GIP 0.875834
GMD 84.560188
GNF 10065.948246
GTQ 8.875031
GYD 242.400846
HKD 9.014361
HNL 30.503843
HRK 7.534665
HTG 151.668566
HUF 381.554195
IDR 19285.519728
ILS 3.783108
IMP 0.875834
INR 103.539518
IQD 1517.792196
IRR 48781.39234
ISK 147.609426
JEP 0.875834
JMD 185.509046
JOD 0.821302
JPY 181.02026
KES 150.274041
KGS 101.298807
KHR 4635.956153
KMF 492.880206
KPW 1042.521915
KRW 1695.577033
KWD 0.355558
KYD 0.965495
KZT 598.056925
LAK 25150.870686
LBP 103765.766484
LKR 356.858165
LRD 205.660718
LSL 19.888098
LTL 3.420333
LVL 0.70068
LYD 6.313968
MAD 10.730037
MDL 19.661899
MGA 5194.928443
MKD 61.530215
MMK 2432.505398
MNT 4127.59617
MOP 9.281212
MRU 46.216762
MUR 53.388283
MVR 17.849641
MWK 2009.08967
MXN 21.272198
MYR 4.782845
MZN 74.018065
NAD 19.888098
NGN 1673.110793
NIO 42.639597
NOK 11.783413
NPR 165.556149
NZD 2.023491
OMR 0.445398
PAB 1.158704
PEN 3.90268
PGK 4.978974
PHP 68.062913
PKR 327.343797
PLN 4.230281
PYG 8084.958431
QAR 4.222715
RON 5.090756
RSD 117.351004
RUB 90.313807
RWF 1685.191336
SAR 4.345478
SBD 9.541834
SCR 15.495853
SDG 696.751006
SEK 10.99058
SGD 1.502102
SHP 0.869069
SLE 26.584557
SLL 24290.207823
SOS 660.996601
SRD 44.601446
STD 23975.693498
STN 24.499874
SVC 10.137948
SYP 12807.860614
SZL 19.880439
THB 37.302171
TJS 10.734737
TMT 4.054257
TND 3.417012
TOP 2.789051
TRY 49.216009
TTD 7.873994
TWD 36.360313
TZS 2852.464297
UAH 48.863049
UGX 4200.014664
USD 1.158359
UYU 46.060161
UZS 13790.048146
VES 281.791954
VND 30551.140613
VUV 142.076324
WST 3.272229
XAF 655.953627
XAG 0.021373
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.130523
XCG 2.088089
XDR 0.815736
XOF 655.905498
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.095087
ZAR 19.872518
ZMK 10426.617837
ZMW 26.647863
ZWL 372.99114
  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.64

    +1.03%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    16.2

    -0.25%

  • NGG

    1.4400

    75.51

    +1.91%

  • BCC

    0.2900

    75.73

    +0.38%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.47

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    57.81

    +1.99%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.02

    +0.98%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    13.9

    +1.37%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.39

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    0.1800

    23.2

    +0.78%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    72.2

    +1.57%

  • RBGPF

    -1.1800

    76.32

    -1.55%

  • AZN

    0.0800

    93.32

    +0.09%

  • BP

    0.2400

    35.93

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.2600

    12.48

    +2.08%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    40.18

    -0.47%

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