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Heat-struck Mediterranean is climate change 'hot spot'
Heat-struck Mediterranean is climate change 'hot spot'
by AFP Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) July 20, 2023

Struck by near-record temperatures and wildfires during this week's heatwave, the Mediterranean region is ranked as a climate-change "hot spot" by scientists.

The beaches, seafood and heritage sites in the region spanning parts of southern Europe, northern Africa and western Asia are under threat.

Here are five key threats to the region flagged by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Its reports are the most comprehensive summary of scientific knowledge on global warming.

- Deadly heatwaves -

Like parts of the United States and Asia, the Med has been hit by extreme heat in recent weeks. The Italian islands of Sardinia and Sicily are forecast to possibly top a continent-wide record of 48.8C (119.8F).

"Heatwaves are increasing due to climate change in the Mediterranean, and are amplified in cities due to urbanisation practices," causing illness and death, the IPCC said in its 2022 report on impacts of climate change and how to adapt to them.

One study published in 2010 led by scientists at the University of Bern calculated that the intensity, length and number of heatwaves in the eastern Mediterranean had increased by about six or seven times since the 1960s.

- Wheat and olives -

A drought in North Africa has left farmers bracing for a terrible harvest. "We've never seen a drought this bad," Tunisian wheat farmer Tahar Chaouachi told AFP. "It's been dry for the last four years but we expected some rain this season. Instead, it's become worse."

With hotter weather drying up groundwater for irrigating farms, the IPCC said that with global warming of more than 1.5C olive yields could fall by a fifth in the northern Mediterranean. The world has warmed more than 1.1C since the 19th century.

Researchers at Stanford University found "the Mediterranean experiencing significant adverse impacts on most crops".

- Water and politics -

A drought in Spain has raised political tensions over water management ahead of a general election on July 23. The European Drought Observatory said groundwater tables across half the Mediterranean region were running low already in June.

The IPCC report warned climate change will worsen water shortages "in most locations" in the region. Lakes and reservoirs are expected to decline by up to 45 percent this century, and surface water availability by up to 55 percent in North Africa.

Meanwhile "terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems are impacted by climate change in the Mediterranean, resulting in loss of habitats and biodiversity," it added.

- Rising seas -

The sea level in the Mediterranean basin has risen 2.8mm a year over recent decades, threatening shorelines and cities such as Venice, which regularly suffers tidal floods.

"Sea level rise already impacts extreme coastal waters around the Mediterranean and it is projected to increase coastal flooding, erosion and salinisation risks," said the IPCC.

"These impacts would affect agriculture, fisheries and aquaculture, urban development, port operations, tourism, cultural sites and many coastal ecosystems."

- Invasive species -

As well as its cherished beaches, climate change threatens the Mediterranean sea and the food produced by its fisheries.

"A shift in Mediterranean marine ecosystems, characterised by biodiversity decline and invasive species, has occurred since the 1980s" due to climate change and other human impacts, the IPCC said.

With global warming of more than 1.5C, more than 20 percent of exploited fish and invertebrates in the Eastern Mediterranean could become locally extinct by 2060 and fishing revenues could decrease up to 30 percent by 2050, it said.

Spain sea temperatures hit new record
Madrid (AFP) July 19, 2023 - Coastal waters around Spain have hit a record high temperature for this time of the year, the national weather office said Wednesday as the country remained on alert due to a sizzling heatwave.

The average temperature of the water off Spain in mid-July reached 24.6 degrees Celsius (76.3 Fahrenheit), 2.2 degrees Celsius higher than the average for the season, according to weather office Aemet.

The figure "far exceeds" the previous records of 24 degrees Celsius hit in 2015 and 23.7 degrees Celsius in 2022, and it is "unprecedented" for mid-July since current records began in 1940, it added.

This situation is even more worrying since the summer is far from over, said Aemet spokesman Ruben del Campo.

"There is still room for the sea to warm even more," he added, referring to both Spain's southern Mediterranean and northern Atlantic waters.

Temperatures in some spots of Spain's Mediterranean southeastern waters have already hit 28 degrees Celsius.

The warning comes as Spain has been since Monday grappling with its third heatwave since the start of summer.

Temperatures on Tuesday peaked at 45.4 degrees Celsius (113.5 Fahrenheit) in Figueres, hometown of Salvador Dali in Catalonia region, a record high for the northeastern region.

The mercury is forecast to surpass 44 degrees Celsius on Wednesday in Alicante, Almeria and Murcia.

The interior ministry warned much of the country faced a "very high" or "extreme" risk of wildfires because of the scorching temperatures.

Hundreds of firefighters, backed by water-dropping aircraft, were battling a blaze raging since Saturday on the island of La Palma, one of the eight making up the Canary Islands in the Atlantic.

The fire has destroyed some 3,500 hectares (8,700 acres) of land, burned around 20 houses and buildings and temporarily forced 4,000 residents to evacuate.

Scientists say heatwaves have become more likely due to climate change.

As global temperatures rise over time, heatwaves are predicted to become more frequent and intense, and their impacts more widespread.

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