ENVIRONMENT CASES:
EUOBSERVER / DEBATE - The climate is changing in
Romania. The land is being dried up by increasingly hot
summers, torrential downpours are becoming the norm and
the side-effects of rapid economic growth are damaging
the environment.
Parts of eastern Romania have become so arid that farming
is impossible and in other areas, over-grazing threatens
to destroy all plant life and usher in an era of
desertification.
The Romanian city of Giurgui is located on the banks of
the Danube, by the Bulgarian border. The temperature in
Giurgiu reached 47 degrees celsius last month and
Bucharest, Romania's capital, is often hotter than 40
degrees. Romania's agricultural sector is being decimated
by these unusually high temperatures, and what is not
dried up by the sun is often carried away by an
increasing number of floods.
Despite the torrential downpours, water supplies have
never been more unstable. As Romania's economy starts to
boom, new factories, supermarkets and houses are being
constructed with a frenzy that has never been seen here
before. Each of these new units consumes a lot of water
and there is an absence of regulations limiting water
consumption. There are no restrictions about sinking new
boreholes, no recycling of waste water, no hosepipe bans,
no debate about water resources or the need for
regulations.
Romania's groundwater sources are not only falling but
they are being increasingly contaminated by pollution.
One of the features of Romania's cities is the presence
of massive garbage dumps, many of which are located by
rivers and all of which leach toxins into the
groundwater.
In Bucharest, a city of 2 million, the outlying village
of Glina has a smoking rubbish heap the size of a small
town. Only a handful of Romania's cities have garbage
recycling systems and it does not seem to be an issue of
urgent political or public interest.
Since joining the EU in January this year, little
progress has been made on any of these issues
although Structural Funds for environmental projects
should become available from 2008.
One effect of EU membership has been the dramatic
increase in the purchase of agricultural land by foreign
investors, but these plots tend to be too small and
scattered to justify modern farming and they are allowed
to go fallow.
At the same time, increasing numbers of Romanian peasants
(about a third of the population) are giving up farming
the land completely and more land is being left to the
elements.
Tree planting campaign
A massive tree planting campaign would address many of
these problems. Forests are a good way to protect
vulnerable land from excessive heat and they can also
soak up a lot of the torrential rain before flooding
occurs.
British environmental writer George Monbiot advises
policy makers to collect rainwater in order to prepare
for future water shortages, and while this is feasible
for individual buildings it isn't practical for large
tracts of land. What better way of retaining the water
(and slowly releasing it) than trees?
Romania has a relatively good forestry management system
and large parts of mountain area are covered in pine and
mixed hardwoods. But there is increasing demand for
timber from industry, a very lucrative export market, and
more trees urgently need to be planted.
Currently in Romania, trees are only planted in
mountainous or hilly areas. But this could change and
forests should be planted in the low lying areas which
have been abandoned or allowed to go fallow.
A range of incentives should be provided for landowners
and local authorities to encourage tree planting, and
urgent measures should be taken to deal with those areas
that have already become semi-desert.
But planting trees shouldn't be just about forests. Lines
of trees can be planted by the sides of fields and these
can play an important double role of soaking up excess
water as well as acting as a wind break. And there is
nothing more attractive than a single oak tree in the
middle of a field.
Alternative to agriculture
Forestry can also provide a viable alternative to
agriculture. Not only can trees provide an income from
the sale of timber, but fruit and nut trees (both of
which flourish in Romania) can provide the basis for new
businesses. Forests are also of interest to tourists, as
well as for locals trying to escape the heat of the city
Only extensive tree coverage will protect Romania's land
from the pattern of heatwaves and floods that is
currently afflicting Romania.
A massive tree planting campaign would also provide short
term employment and medium term profit for Romania's
peasant farmers who are feeling increasingly
vulnerable now that they are part of the Common
Agriculture Project.
Rupert Wolfe Murray is a PR consultant and project
manager based in Romania. He can be contacted on
wolfemurray@gmail.com
© 2007 EUobserver, All rights
reserved
|