logo
Low water levels push up shipping costs on Europe's rivers amid heatwave

Low water levels push up shipping costs on Europe's rivers amid heatwave

The Guardian5 days ago
Low water levels after heatwaves and drought are limiting shipping on some of Europe's biggest rivers including the Rhine and the Danube and pushing up transport costs.
As much of Europe swelters in hot temperatures, water levels in its main rivers have fallen. This is affecting shipping along the Rhine – one of Europe's key waterways – south of Duisburg and Cologne in Germany, including the choke point of Kaub, forcing vessels to sail about half full.
Rainfall over the weekend caused only a moderate rise in water levels, according to commodity traders.
Shallow water has prompted ship operators to impose surcharges on freight rates to compensate for vessels not sailing fully loaded, increasing costs for cargo owners. Traders told Reuters that loads that are normally transported on one vessel were being carried on several barges.
Most of the nearly 200 million tons of cargo shipped on German rivers each year – from coal to car parts, grains and food to chemicals – is transported on the Rhine, the second longest river in central and western Europe after the Danube.
Unusually low water levels on the Danube in Hungary are affecting shipping and agriculture, as temperatures peaked at 35C in Budapest last week. This means cargo ships must leave behind more than half of their loads and can only operate at 30-40% capacity, Attila Bencsik, the deputy president of the Hungarian Shipping Association, said.
In Poland, the water level in the Vistula, the country's longest river, has fallen to its lowest ever recorded level in Warsaw as temperatures stayed above 30C for a prolonged spell and there has been little rainfall.
Three years ago, German companies faced supply bottlenecks and production problems after a drought and heatwave led to unusually low water levels on the Rhine.
That summer, the French energy supplier EDF had to temporarily reduce output at its nuclear power stations on the Rhône and Garonne rivers as heatwaves pushed up their temperatures, restricting its ability to use their water to cool the plants.
More rain is forecast in Germany in the coming days, which could raise water levels.
Sign up to Business Today
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
after newsletter promotion
The lack of rainfall is causing problems elsewhere. In Yorkshire, water reservoirs have plunged. Data released by Yorkshire Water, which has more than 5 million customers, showed that levels have dropped further from 63% recorded in May to 55.8% in June – significantly below the average (81.9%) for this time of year.
Reservoirs are close to half full, with most of the summer still ahead. Yorkshire's reservoirs have been declining since late January amid the driest spring for 132 years in the county and England's warmest June on record. During warm weather, water usage usually increases, which further affects reservoir levels. Customers used almost 1.5bn litres on 30 June – 200m litres above Yorkshire Water's typical daily output.
Another UK water company, Severn Trent, has urged its 8 million customers to be 'mindful of their water use'. It said there was less water in reservoirs and rivers and while there was no plan for a hosepipe ban, it remained an option.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

All a bit of a disaster: Yorkshire farmer tells of heat and dry weather impact
All a bit of a disaster: Yorkshire farmer tells of heat and dry weather impact

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

All a bit of a disaster: Yorkshire farmer tells of heat and dry weather impact

A farmer in Yorkshire has said she will struggle to feed her animals after the dry weather and heat slashed her hay yields, adding: 'It's all a bit of a disaster.' Angela Serino is the director of Beetle Bank Open Farm & Wild Sanctuary in York – a small, open, working farm where the public can visit the animals. Beetle Bank – which has goats, pigs, alpacas and rabbits – grows its own hay on 10 acres of land to feed the animals all the way through the winter and until April when its farmers typically buy a few bales until the next hay cut. But with Yorkshire experiencing one of its driest years on record, Ms Serino said Beetle Bank will not be able to operate as usual. 'This year we're expecting to have less than a quarter of the hay that we usually have,' she told the PA news agency. 'Nobody else seems interested around here but it's stressing me out big time because our animals are part of the system. You can't just be without them, and we can't be without food for them.' She continued: 'It's going to mean more animals will have to go than usual. 'Winter's always a bad time for us because we have very little income coming in and now we'll have a massive, massive food bill to find the money for as well because we'll have to feed our animals hard food and hope that there's plenty of that about.' Beetle Bank usually produces around 50 to 70 big bales of hay a year. 'I'm not expecting to have more than about 10 this year looking at the fields,' Ms Serino said. 'That's a couple of thousands of pounds down the drain before you get going never mind the feed that you have to buy in to replace that.' The farm director has been in contact with other farmers in the area who have told her they will have 'very little' hay for sale this year. She told PA that Beetle Bank is looking into an irrigation system to mitigate the impact from dry and hot weather if the same conditions return next year. Ms Serino said: 'Strangely enough I've been thinking about it all spring – this spring when it was really hot and dry, and I was thinking should I go out, should I buy a water canon of some description and you just think that this is Britain and it will change. 'You don't want to spend £5,000 on some sort of water system that sprinkles the fields when you don't have to and at the end of the day I should have just gone and done it then I wouldn't be in the state I'm in today. 'It's all a bit of a disaster to be honest. 'I don't remember being stressed about the winter in the summer before, except for 2019 where it poured with rain from the middle of middle of May until, god, I think February.' Ms Serino is not currently getting any support from the Government, saying it 'doesn't care about farming'. 'In an ideal world, they could go around and give us all a grant for the machinery we need to make what we need,' she said. 'There was a grant going not long ago but it's so difficult to actually apply for these things. There's so many hoops you've got to jump through to actually get something and you have to match the funding. 'Well, if you don't have any money it's very difficult to match funding. 'It's difficult times, and farming is not good.' Besides the issues with hay yields, Ms Serino said the farm has used 'an awful lot more water than usual' this year and has struggled to put up fencing it needed because the ground is 'like a rock'. The hot weather has also impacted revenue from visitors. 'Today and yesterday, we've only half the customers we should have because they don't like this weather,' Ms Serino told PA. 'So when it gets this hot, it has an effect on your revenue as well as your costs. 'We are way down on revenue today. This will be one of the worst Saturdays we've had in a long time.' She said the climate has gone 'completely upside down inside out' in the last five or six years. 'I just sort of saw it coming, but not properly,' she said. 'I saw something coming but not the actual extent that it is until you're sat on the doorstep with it. England so far this year" data-source="Met Office"> 'It's difficult to predict but I didn't really predict that you'd have months and months of no rain. 'I mean, every week you look at the weather and it says rain. I look on my phone now and it says it's raining Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and it just doesn't rain.' Yorkshire and north-east England has seen an average of just 242.8mm of rain so far in 2025 – less than half the amount that had fallen by this stage last year (542.3mm). Cumulative rainfall so far this year is the lowest for this part of the country since 1959, when 238.1mm had fallen by July 9.

Hungary's opposition flags 'New Deal' to kickstart stagnating economy
Hungary's opposition flags 'New Deal' to kickstart stagnating economy

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

Hungary's opposition flags 'New Deal' to kickstart stagnating economy

NAGYKANIZSA, Hungary, July 12 (Reuters) - Hungary's opposition leader Peter Magyar said on Saturday his Tisza party will launch a "Hungarian New Deal" to revive the stagnating economy with massive investment and predictable policy if it wins elections next year. Magyar, whose centre-right party has a firm lead over the ruling Fidesz in most opinion polls, poses the biggest political challenge to nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who after 15 years in power finds himself struggling to boost the inflation-hit economy. The risk of steep U.S. tariffs on EU imports also looms large over recovery prospects and Saturday's announcement of 30% tariffs on the EU by President Donald Trump is bad news for the Central European country. Magyar announced his Hungarian New Deal plan to supporters at his party's congress in the western city of Nagykanizsa. "We need economic growth, investments, predictable financial and economic policy in Hungary," Magyar said, adding that Tisza would crack down on corruption and buy back state assets that he said had been stolen over the past 15 years. The main pillars of Tisza's plan will be a major healthcare reform with additional funding of 500 billion forints ($1.5 billion) annually, a large-scale rental flat and home construction programme, a modernisation of state railways using EU and national funds, and investments in energy efficiency for households and in education. Magyar, a former government insider who burst into Hungarian politics last year, again pledged to unlock some 20 billion euros of suspended EU funds that Hungary has not received for years due to clashes between Brussels and Orban over a perceived erosion of democracy and corruption -- accusations that Orban denies. The parliamentary election is set to take place early next year, though no date has been set. In June parliament passed Orban's 2026 election year budget, including steep tax cuts for families, a key demographic group for Fidesz. "People are fed up with this regime. And Tisza is a kind of 'collecting party' which stood behind all this (discontent). People want change," said Edit Piroska Borsi, a retired teacher at the congress. ($1 = 341.6200 forints)

UK hosepipe ban rules: What you can and cannot do
UK hosepipe ban rules: What you can and cannot do

The Independent

time6 hours ago

  • The Independent

UK hosepipe ban rules: What you can and cannot do

Hosepipe bans have been introduced across parts of England as the country suffers drought conditions and water shortages following a prolonged spell of dry weather. So far nearly seven million Britons face water restrictions, after South East Water announced on Friday that customers in Kent and Sussex have been placed under a hosepipe ban due to record levels of water consumption. The South East ban was announced after a hosepipe ban came into effect across Yorkshire. The ban comes as a third heatwave grips the country, with the UK expected to experience the hottest weekend of the year so far with forecasts of more than 34C for some parts. Yorkshire Water said it brought in restrictions to protect supplies ahead of the ongoing dry weather, while South East Water said demand for drinking water had reached 'record levels since May'. Other companies have warned they may have to take similar action if nothing significant changes to water supplies. Police have asked residents not to contact them about hosepipe ban rulebreakers, and instead contact local water authorities. According to the government's Environment Agency, the official name for a hosepipe ban is a Temporary Use Ban (TUB). Here is what people can and cannot do, according to the TUB rules. What can't you do in a hosepipe ban? Water a garden using a hosepipe Water plants on non-commercial or domestic premises using a hosepipe Clean a private vehicle using a hosepipe Clean a private leisure boat with a hosepipe Fill or maintain a domestic swimming pool (including paddling pools) with a hosepipe Draw water with a hosepipe for domestic recreational use Fill or maintain a domestic pond using a hosepipe Fill or maintain an ornamental fountain using a hosepipe The Environment Agency's definition of a garden includes a park, gardens that are open to the public, grass verges, lawns, sports grounds, allotment gardens, any allotment area used for non-commercial purposes, and any other green spaces. The ban includes the use of sprinklers. What can you do in a hosepipe ban? Businesses can still use hosepipes if they are being used for commercial purposes. Other people can still water plants or their garden, or wash their car, but these things instead must be done with a watering can or bucket to help conserve water. The Environment Agency said there are actions people could take to save water, that even people who aren't under a hosepipe ban could do. Those include fixing leaking toilets, taking shorter showers, and installing a rain butt to collect rainwater.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store