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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Poland needs to save water for (non-)rainy day

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With his two fishing rods planted firmly on the bank of the Vistula river, 85-year-old Tadeusz Norberciak peers at rocks exposed on the dry riverbed, a telling sign of Poland’s looming water crisis.


“I can’t remember water levels being as low as what we’ve seen in recent years, it’s tragic”, says the pensioner, sporting a fisherman’s vest and cap for protection against the blazing sun.


“Further north, it’s even worse, the Vistula looks like puddles,” he said on a part of the waterway passing through the capital Warsaw.


Hundreds of rivers in Poland are drying up little by little.


According to experts, the central European country of 38 million people risks a serious water crisis in the coming years.


Poland’s Supreme Audit Office (NIK) warned in a recent report that already there is only 1,600 cubic metres of water available for each Pole per year, which is only slightly more than the EU average.


“Our (water) resources are comparable to those of Egypt,” it said in the report bearing the ominous title: “Poland, European Desert”.


Steppe


Contrary to popular belief, Poland, which is located at the confluence of oceanic and continental climate zones, has never had much water.


It receives less rainfall than countries further west, while the rate of evaporation is comparable.


Warmer winters with less snow mean that groundwater is not being replenished by spring melts.


And Poland captures little of this water, which experts say is a big part of the problem.


The result is that a vast strip of land across the country is slowly turning into steppe — semi-arid grass-covered plains, that threatens agriculture, forests and wildlife.


With climate change, more frequent droughts and only brief and often violent rainstorms, experts insist the situation is reaching a critical threshold.


“In 2018, a very, very dry year, water levels fell to 1,100 cubic metres per capita, per year, nearly below the safety threshold,” says Sergiusz Kiergiel, spokesperson for Wody polskie (Polish waters), the state institution responsible for water policy.


The situation is likely to be even worse this year.


The Polish Hydrological Service sounded the alarm in July, warning that groundwater levels in 12 out of 16 Polish provinces could be too low to fill shallow wells.


Over 320 municipalities have already imposed water restrictions carrying heavy fines. Some have banned filling swimming pools, watering gardens or washing cars.


Skierniewice, a town of 47,000 people some 80 kilometres southwest of Warsaw, had to cut water in some districts in early June. For days, water was only available to ground-floor flats.


With no running water on upper floors, municipal authorities were forced to distribute ten-litre water bags to furious residents.


Crucial reservoirs


The shortages are triggering social conflict.


Residents of Sulmierzyce in central Poland accuse a local open pit brown coal mine of syphoning off water.


In Podkowa Lesna, a small leafy town near Warsaw, resident are up in arms against their neighbours in nearby Zolwin, whom they accuse of using too much water from a common source to water their gardens.


“Parts of the country are already experiencing hydrogeological drought — a situation when water doesn’t enter the deep layers of the soil and is not filtered in springs,” says Wody polskie’s Kiergiel.


Experts insist that capturing more water is crucial.


Lacking sufficient reservoirs, Poland retains only 6.5 per cent of the water that passes through its territory, while Spain manages to keep nearly half.


To ward off a crisis, the government plans to spend 14 billion zlotys (3.28 billion euros $3.6 billion) to build around 30 holding tanks. These should double Poland’s water retention capacity by 2027. — AFP


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