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Alentejo householders instructed on 'how to save water'

water2The inhabitants of 17 municipalities in the Alentejo region will be getting leaflets this week, telling them how to save water as there is a drought.

A campaign slogan, ‘Água. Usando bem, mais gente tem’ ('Water. Using it well means more people will have some') is being promoted by the company Águas Públicas do Alentejo, in partnership with the Association of Municipalities for Public Water Management in the Alentejo.

The hopelessly late-in-the-day initiative aims to "raise awareness about the rational use of water and promote adherence to good practices that can help manage this precious resource, especially in the current drought situation,” according to Águas Públicas do Alentejo which so far has ‘sensitised’ 17 of the 21 municipalities in the Alentejo for which it is responsible.

The campaign will be disseminated through information sent to the householders, and through posters and leaflets distributed to municipal and parish councils. The leaflets advise people to avoid watering their flower and vegetable gardens, as well as asking them to reduce the number of car washes and to stop hosing down their backyards.

In July, almost 79% of mainland Portugal was categorised as being in severe or extreme drought conditions, with the situation worst in the interior of the Alentejo - a fact that will not have gone unnoticed by householders living in the area.

Águas Públicas do Alentejo commented "The country is in drought although there are some municipalities that are more worrisome than others."

"The situation is more critical in the municipalities located farther south that have locations supplied only from groundwater - also the Monte da Rocha dam system, which has no connection to the Alqueva reservoir, which supplies Almodôvar, Ourique and Castro Verde.”

"The rational use of water has to start to be a cultural thing, people have to be concerned on a day to day basis, regardless of the drought," warned the Águas Públicas do Alentejo spokesperson who thought it not the best time to discuss leakage rates.

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Comments  

+2 #2 Emma B 2017-08-17 07:36
Good decision to go back to Somerset.
Just like Britain can have extreme floods in the winter, as was seen a few years ago in the north of England, Portugal can have extreme heat, which results in water shortages in some rural locations.
Would think most potential buyers of property would do basic a check for water and electricity supplies before purchasing though.
+1 #1 Millie Davies 2017-08-16 07:52
Readers of the expat webpages 8 to 10 years ago would have noted a brief flurry of concerned Algarvians and foreigners elsewhere in Portugal reporting dried wells. Before the media blackout was imposed. Their needing ever deeper boring in competition with large landowners and rich golf courses.

Some British we have stayed in touch with needing 6 ever deeper boreholes before giving up and returning to Somerset,UK. Then learning that estate agents at the time were intentionally withholding notice of water shortage and dried up wells to potential new arrival buyers. Our British friends being told by the Imobiliaria 'the less said the better' so not to open the subject themselves or hint at any problem. If asked say that a major programme linking residents to municipal water was underway. Except, as we now know, for so many it wasn't !

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