Speaking to Lusa, APA vice-president José Pimenta Machado admitted that the contingency plan will penalise agriculture more, but the quotas have not yet been defined and will be coordinated locally.
“This year, in the Algarve, we are going through the worst drought ever, we have never been in this situation, with the lowest levels of reservoir reserves ever and the same thing in groundwater”, a “consequence of ten years of drought” said Pimenta Machado.
“The priority use is human use and agriculture will have a greater cut”, added Pimenta Machado.
“We are designing a plan” of “continuous evaluation” and “listening to the sectors - agriculture, urban sector, tourism – and working with them to define” the actions to be taken, seeking to “define water cuts, whether for the urban sector, whether for tourism or agriculture”, said the official who did not want to anticipate the values in question, although he admits that the biggest impact will be on agricultural production.
“The plan will be presented very soon”. Next week, an inter-ministerial drought commission will be held and then the document will be presented in the region, always with the “central objective of not running out of water for the population”.
The six reservoirs in the Algarve are at 25% of their capacity, 20 percentage points less than in the same period last year, with a total of 90 cubic hectometres less water.
Portugal is experiencing two different realities when it comes to water levels. In the north, the reservoirs have an average water level of 75%, while south of the Tagus, namely in the southwest of Alentejo and in the Algarve, the “situation is critical” because the “rain did not allow the problems to be resolved”.
Of the ten driest years ever, six were after 2000 and the last 20 years have seen a 25% reduction in precipitation, he added.
Historic levels
In the past, the historic drought of 2005 in the Algarve led to the construction of the Odelouca dam and “it was thought that the problem of water reserves had been resolved for the region”.
“The truth is that, ten years later, we are all worried here”, because “there has been less precipitation”, which has worsened the situation of the groundwater.
The official also appealed to citizens to save water, particularly in the Algarve region, with “small acts” that allow for better management of the scarce resource of water.
Pimenta Machado highlighted that this contingency plan aims to respond to the current water stress, but a series of projects are underway, to be financed by the Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR), which will include more permanent measures.
Among these measures, he highlighted “portable desalination plants” or the increased use of water from Wastewater Treatment Plants, particularly for golf courses.
“We want to reach the end of the PRR and reuse eight million cubic meters” of water, four times more than is already used today and serving a total of “16 to 17 fields”.
Furthermore, other major measures are “making sea water drinkable”, through the first large desalination plant for the Albufeira area, with a capacity of 16 million cubic meters, and the transfer in Sota-vento, with connection between the Pomarão and Guadiana.
These proposed measures come nowhere near tackling the drought situation which has been building over the past ten years. Reduced precipitation and increasing population requires more radical action than "cutting back" desalination and reuse. Cutting waste from leaking infrastructure should be tackled as well.
Should weather patterns continue to produce less rainfall then water needs to be moved from where there is a surplus to where the need is greatest. If the powers that be continue to procrastinate for another 10 years then the Algarve will suffer irreparable damage.
Time to take a much longer term view.
By Steve from Algarve on 08 Jan 2024, 18:49
How about the authorities take a slightly longer term more structural outlook andc build some desalination plants.....it's frightening how central and regional Govt promote development without any improvement in infrastructure.
By jeremy rumble from Algarve on 08 Jan 2024, 21:48
Reduce watering to golf courses and build solar power desalination plants- there is no great mystery to a solution both short and long term. Relying on increased rainfall is a sitting on hands approach which benefits no one.
By Matthew from Lisbon on 09 Jan 2024, 11:07
Aside from Almond trees in the Alentejo which are known for consuming vast amounts of water, orange groves have and continue to be planted in the Algarve. Drive anywhere outside of a city and you will come up to one. In the past, people grew what their property could support. Now, water is channeled from distant reservoirs because a business needs it to make money. This kind of agriculture needs to be controlled, because the only control now is greed.
By Paul from Algarve on 09 Jan 2024, 11:24
How can a governments that they are planning to tackle the drought situation while also allowing more foreign developers to build resort properties, let builders erect more multifamily structures and allow more migrants to emigrate to the Algarve. The first step in "cutting back" should be slowing the demand for water.
By Gene M from Algarve on 09 Jan 2024, 12:22
Too many people leads to less water. Reduce the number of tourists, accommodations, plantations, golf courses etc. Obligate water reduction measures and give grants for that. Although that can spill more money!
By Ron Lior from Lisbon on 09 Jan 2024, 14:23
This is another price of Governmental PR. We are yet to see ANY slow down in the massive and idiotic transformation of any “unutilised” land with Advocado planting. This starts with ploughing up ALL vegetation and trees (despite Environmental concerns) and laying of irrigation pipes. Whilst our gardens and golf courses go brown, commercial Agriculture (Corporate planted…financed by Government officials no doubt) is turning the land a very bright green and fences proclaim the Corporate owners, not that any investigation would ever find the real owners !!!
By Chris Loynes from Algarve on 09 Jan 2024, 14:34
The government are a joke. They allow continuous expansion of agriculture and construction for human population in a region that has the most critical water shortage. This should STOP immediately until the situation is resolved. Infrastructure needs to be built to take water from the North to the South of the country without years of procrastinating.
No-one has said what will happen to the biproducts of de-salination, that is highly concentrated brine and other chemicals used in some forms of de-salination.
By david from Algarve on 09 Jan 2024, 15:23
Long term planning in Portugal exists only for the politicians pension arrangements, for everything else long term means Friday 5 ,O'clock
By John from Alentejo on 10 Jan 2024, 11:43
No one is even mentioning the scandalous continuing growth of a MONOCULTURE here in Eastern Algarve, that of Advocadoes. This MUST be discontinued and ALL outstanding licences be cancelled. This is the single biggest issue here for one of the worst drought affected areas in the country.
By Chris Loynes from UK on 21 Feb 2024, 15:24