Tropical crops in Spain are dying due to irrigating with salinized waters

Published 2022년 8월 26일

Tridge summary

The tropical farming sector in Andalusia is facing a crisis due to the salinization of irrigation water caused by high chloride levels, despite having a nearly full reservoir. Farmers like Francisco García are struggling with crop damage, and the situation is worsened by the lack of pipes from the Béznar-Rules dams, which could supply fresh water. The farmers are demanding an emergency declaration from the Junta de Andalucía and the Ministry of Agriculture, calling for the diversion of fresh water for irrigation and the construction of swamp canals.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The tropical sector in Andalusia is dying and it is doing so not because of a lack of water, but because of the salinity with which they are forcing their plantations to be irrigated. With a reservoir at 80% of its capacity and releasing daily water into the sea, it is not explained how the administrations do not take measures: the first an Emergency Declaration. The producing sector of the tropical coast of Andalusia is going through a difficult time due to the lack of water resources with which to irrigate their crops. The drop in aquifer reserves is causing the salinization of water used for irrigation, with serious consequences for crops. Francisco García, a tropical farmer (avocado, mango and custard apple) is irrigating his crops with salinized water combined with anti-saline products, but despite this, the effects he already perceives on his crops are numerous: "avocado has a high water stress, the leaves are drying, and we fear that it will begin to affect the branches and ...

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