
England faces "nationally significant" water shortfall
The Peninsula
London: England s ongoing water shortage has been declared a nationally significant incident, the Environment Agency said on Tuesday. Five areas...
London: England's ongoing water shortage has been declared a "nationally significant incident," the Environment Agency said on Tuesday.
Five areas are officially in drought, with six more experiencing prolonged dry conditions after the driest six-month period to July since 1976. Despite unsettled weather in July, many river flows and reservoir levels continued to drop from June.
Official figures show reservoir stocks fell by 2 percent last week to an average 67.7 percent full, compared with 80.5 percent for the first week of August and 75.6 percent last month.
Experts warn of severe impacts, including reduced crop yields and livestock feed, damaged wetlands and river habitats, as well as an increase in wildfires.
The National Farmers' Union said water shortages have disrupted this year's growing season, while the Environment Agency noted that July was the fifth warmest on record, despite local rainstorms. August began with drier conditions and the fourth heatwave of the summer, adding strain to water supplies and navigation routes.













