From the DW:
“Why Italy is struggling to
contain wildfires”
Amid the current heatwave, Italy is struggling to contain the wildfires that are raging around the country. In addition to the scorching heat, there is a variety of reasons why wildfires have become such a problem. Southern Europe is currently experiencing one of the worst heat waves in recent decades, with Italy, Greece, Spain and Turkey all battling wildfires. Fires have been raging throughout Italy for weeks. Several central and southern regions have lost tens of thousands of hectares of forest. In Sardinia, botanists are alarmed at the decimation of the local biodiversity and the number of secular olive groves that have been destroyed. In Sicily, wildfires reached Catania, where about 150 people were evacuated by sea, and the airport was closed for several hours. Since June 15, firefighters have been called out more than 37,000 times — including 1,500 times on Sunday alone. The reason why Italy is struggling to cope with the problem is a combination of political responsibilities, forest protection bureaucracy and alleged criminal activity. According to Coldiretti, the largest farmers association in Italy, at least 60% of the wildfires in Italy were started by arson. Two arsonists were arrested on August 2 in Troina, a rural town in the Enna province of central Sicily, where numerous wind power plants are being built. This has raised suspicions because such plants take land away from agriculture. "We must pay close attention to the hypothesis that the wind business wants to weaken local farmers, forcing them to do something else," said Fabio Venezia, mayor of Troina, to the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, suggesting that arson could be a strategy to force farmers to sell their land — but he stopped short of directly blaming the companies. To prevent such scenarios, a national law dating from the year 2000 prohibits a change in land use in the 15 years after a fire. However, it is up to local authorities to enforce the law properly and the law does allow for some exceptions. These suspicions are currently being investigated by the Sicilian anti-mafia commission — a body set up by the Sicilian parliament — which is auditing some landowners who have reportedly been approached by intermediaries offering to sell the land to affiliates of the wind sector. "There is a need to reflect on what is happening," Claudio Fava, president of the commission, told the news website Live Sicilia. "There has been a spasmodic search for land that could be purchased for €30,000 per hectare, while 200 applications for photovoltaic projects have already been submitted to the regional government." Prosecutors in Sicily and other regions have opened investigations into arson incidents, but the existence of a criminal scheme has yet to be proven.
Insufficient funding and staff
shortages Criminal hypotheses aside, the slow response to the fires has
also been a major issue. For years, firefighters have been complaining that
they cannot guarantee adequate services due to insufficient funding and a
shortage of staff. A 2016 law merged the National Forestry Corp with the
Carabinieri (Italy's military police corps), making fire brigades — which
usually operate in urban areas — responsible for most bushfire control duties.
Because fire prevention is managed at the regional level, regional governments
have to sign periodic cooperation protocols with fire brigades, even though the
latter don't always have the means to fight fires in rural areas, which have
been badly affected by drought. According to local authorities, reservoirs in
Sicily have about 78 million cubic meters less water than last year, the lowest
level this decade. For this reason, in January 2021, the Sicilian government
allocated €20 million to farmers to improve water reserve capacities. According
to a 2019 reportby the Italian National Research Center (CNR), 70% of Sicily is
at risk of desertification. Across central and southern Italy, this figure
ranges from 30% in Sardinia to over 50% in Apulia.
Forest management and
bureaucracy Nevertheless, woodlands in Italy have increased by about 25% in
the last 30 years, going from 9 million to 11.4 million hectares and covering
38% of the country. That is the same amount as in Germany, which is about
55,000 square kilometers bigger than Italy. The demographic decline in rural
areas is one reason for forest expansion. Nevertheless, "the forestry
sector is still, in part, conditioned by a culture that dates from the
nineteenth century, when the country adopted strict legislation for the protection
of woodland areas and created a special forest police force," explains
Davide Pettenella, a professor at the Department of Land, Environment,
Agriculture and Forestry at the University of Padua. "In fact, the most
powerful forest policy instruments are still regulatory constraints. There is a
need for a paradigm shift: from 'prohibiting to protect' to 'managing to
valorize.'" In 2020, for example, the Council of State — the
highest body in the Italian administrative justice system — ruled that local
authorities in charge of forest management in Tuscany cannot cut down trees
without obtaining authorization to do so from the Superintendent Office of
Landscaping. This added layer of bureaucracy has slowed down work. A
fire on August 1 ripped through the Pineta Dannunziana, an urban pine forest in
the city of Pescara, forcing 800 people to flee their homes. At least a dozen
were injured, including a 5-year-old girl, and tourists were forced to flee the
beach as flames edged closer to bathing establishments. "The Pineta
Dannunziana is considered by law to be an 'integral nature reserve' and cannot,
therefore, be subjected to forest management, despite the warnings from the
agronomists," said Carlo Masci, mayor of Pescara. "The undergrowth
burned very quickly."
A missed opportunity for
funding According to environmental associations, Italy should not have
missed out on the opportunity offered by NextGenerationEU to at least boost
forest protection with some resources. NextGenerationEU is the EU's plan to
support the economic recovery of member states hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Italy has been allocated €235.14 billion from the fund, making it its largest
beneficiary. But the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) submitted by
the Italian government to access these funds, "does not allocate a single
euro to forests," says Marco Bussone, president of the National Union of
Municipalities, Communities and Mountain Entities (UNCEM). "There are only
€140 million for 'green communities' — eco-sustainable mountain communities —
which we obtained after a lot of effort." In 2018, the Italian
government passed an innovative forest management law, which Bussone describes
as "one of the best in Europe". However, the law has not been
properly implemented because it was not backed up by the necessary resources,
which according to UNCEM would be at least €100 million a year. "It
is an absurd situation for a country made of forests like Italy," said
Bussone.
^ Wildfires are plaguing many
countries around the world right now (the US, Italy, Greece, Turkey, etc.) It is
sad to see and hear about how people and animals are being hurt or killed by
the fires. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/why-italy-is-struggling-to-contain-wildfires/a-58753964
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