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Europe prays for Easter rain in worst drought for a century

Famed Seville Easter processions called off over rain
Seville, Spain (AFP) April 22, 2011 - Heavy rains forced church officials in Spain's southwestern city of Seville to call off all six nightime Good Friday Easter processions this year for the first time since 1933. Organised by religious brotherhoods and featuring huge floats of wooden sculptures of religious scenes accompanied by hooded penitents, the processions known as "La Madruga" are the high point of Easter Week festivities in the city. They draw thousands of tourists and are broadcast live on television across Spain. But this year's processions, which had been due to begin in the early hours of Friday, had to be cancelled amid heavy rains.

"The weather is getting worse. The weather front has hit us directly. There is more water on the way," the head of the brotherhood that puts on the Esperanza de Triana procession, Adolfo Vela, said when he announced it would not take place this year. The last time none of the six procession were held was 1933. In that year the political turbulence before Spain's 1936-39 civil war was to blame. Many faithful who had gathered to watch the processions, which date back to medieval times, were reduced to tears after the announcement that they would not take place. The city plans all year for the spectacle and many parents enlist their children in the brotherhoods at a young age because it takes years to move up the ranks and earn a prestigious spot in a procession.

The first procession, called El Silencio because participants march in silence, traditionally gets underway just after midnight and the last wraps up at dawn. The processions follow a designated route from the floats' home churches to Seville's main cathedral in the historic centre of Spain's fourth-largest city. While processions are held in other Spanish cities to mark the day when Roman Catholics believe Jesus Christ was put to death, the ones held in Seville are among the biggest and most solemn. The national weather office put 23 provinces on "yellow" alert on Friday, the second stage of its four-stage alert scale which warns that forecast weather conditions are not unusual but "potentially dangerous".
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) April 22, 2011
The Dutch have banned barbecues, camp fires and outdoor smoking this Easter, while the Swiss are forecasting potentially the worst drought in Europe for more than a century.

Either way, prayers in Europe this Easter holiday weekend are as likely to call for rain as anything else -- with serious fears over the wheat harvest, its impact on already sky-high global food prices and, of course, devastating brush fires.

A year ago, it was Russia that bore the brunt of global warming, and with the price of benchmark wheat futures jumping by more than a fifth since the spring in the global market hub of Chicago, farmers everywhere are busy scanning the skies for soothing signs.

Traditional Easter fairs in the east and the north of the Netherlands have been cancelled because of the risk of fires posed by the extraordinarily dry weather affecting northern Europe, Dutch news agency ANP said.

In the eastern half of the country, one of Europe's biggest traders, outdoor family barbecues, smoking and camp fires are a strict no-no.

In the Swiss canton of Zurich, officials began moving trout this week from the river Toess before their habitat dried up.

This year threatens to bring "one of the most significant droughts since 1864," the year when records began in Switzerland, said Olivier Duding, a climatologist from Swiss weather service Meteosuisse.

The drought in western Switzerland over the last 12 months is as severe as those recorded in 1884 and 1921, Meteosuisse said.

Several cantons have also imposed bans on lighting fire in and close to forests.

Urs Vogt, who manages an association which champions keeping calves with their mothers after birth, warned that once the cows have fed on this spring's first greens, there may be little left for coming months.

A grass shortage could also lead to a fodder shortfall for next winter.

While the Czech Republic, Slovakia and the Baltic states of northeastern Europe are not reporting drought, the British Met Office warns it has been "incredibly dry in many parts in March and April."

Rainfall is at 40 percent of normal levels, and England and Wales had the driest March in more than a century. Beware the ides, as they say.

Soon, if the hot, dry spell continues, water use restrictions will be forced on residents and companies there.

Six out of 10 French reservoirs are holding water levels far below what is normal, meaning similar irrigation controls are likely there.

March was already extremely volatile for grains, largely due to growing economic uncertainties and the turmoil in North Africa and parts of the Near East -- as well as the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, the Food and Agriculture Organization said after logging a first, slight drop in raw food prices for eight months.

Prices hit record highs at the beginning of the year, and while the main focus for specialist traders is in the United States, a deteriorating drought in Europe could yet spark deep concern.

While European Commission agriculture spokesman Roger Waite acknowledges a "slight" rise in the prices of maize and wheat, he maintained that winter crops remain "generally in good condition."

A spokeswoman for European farmers federation Copa-Cogeca said it was too soon to draw conclusions, but Belgian farmer Guy Franck, who heads a dairy collective in French-speaking Wallonia, says gut instinct tells him worse is yet to come.

"I've been in this game for 30 years, I've never seen a month of April like this one," he said.

"Everything with short roots is seriously dehydrated," he warned.

burs-rt/lth/boc



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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Swiss face one of worst droughts on record
Geneva (AFP) April 20, 2011
Swiss officials began moving trout from a river this week to save them from plunging water levels, amid one of the worst droughts to hit the country in 150 years. "2011 is off to a good start to finish as one of the most significant droughts since 1864," the year when records began in Switzerland, said Olivier Duding, a climatologist from Swiss weather service Meteosuisse. Across Switzer ... read more







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