Monday, 20 June 2022

Italy's Drought Is Now So Intense, Old Shipwrecks Are Starting to Emerge

SARAH JACKSON, BUSINESS INSIDER, 20 JUNE 2022

The remains of the 55-meter barge. 
(Piero Cruciatti/AFP/Getty Images)

A historic drought affecting Italy's largest river has brought a World War II-era shipwreck to light.

The Po River runs 405 miles (651.8 km) from the Cottian Alps to empty into the Adriatic Sea. It's currently facing its worst drought in 70 years, which has caused a decades-old sunken ship to resurface.

The Zibello, a 160-foot (48.8-meter) barge that transported wood in World War II and sank in 1943, is usually hidden beneath the Po's waters, the Associated Press reports. Now, the river's water levels are so low that the wreckage is visible to onlookers.

(Piero Cruciatti/AFP/Getty Images)

"It's the first time that we can see this barge," amateur cyclist Raffaele Vezzali told the AP from a park near the village of Gualtieri.

Alessio Bonin took photos of the wreckage with his drone. He told The Guardian it was a startling sight.

"In recent years you could see the bow of the boat, so we knew it was there, but to see the vessel so exposed in March, when it was essentially still winter, was very dramatic," Bonin said. "I've never seen such a drought at this time of year – our main worry used to be our river flooding, now we worry about it disappearing."


A heron stands on the now exposed sunk ship.
 (Piero Cruciatti/AFP/Getty Images)



A number of factors spurred by climate change are contributing to the drought. The AP reports that Northern Italy hasn't seen rain in more than 110 days, snowfall was down 70 percent this year, and above-average temperatures are melting snow and glaciers on the surrounding Alps, robbing the Po basin of its water reservoirs for summer.

Meuccio Berselli, secretary general of the Po River Basin Authority, told the AP that in one riverside village called Boretto, river flow typically measures 476,000 gallons per second. Now, it's just 80,000 gallons per second.

The drought threatens drinking water supplies, irrigation for agriculture in Italy's most intensively farmed region, and hydroelectric power plants for energy production, the AP reports.

This article was originally published by Business Insider.


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