Janet and Rita 2024 here come the grannies T-shirt
share the Janet and Rita 2024 here come the grannies T-shirt What’s more,I will buy this water that remains. The dilemma has pitted locals, farmers and tourists against each other as they fight over a resource that is growing more scarce by the day. “It’s difficult to avoid these reactions, because when people suffer, they need to react somehow,” said Meritxell Serret, Catalonia’s foreign minister and former agriculture minister. “There is a lot that needs to be done – in every sector – and we are aware that we cannot demand they do that from one day to another.” Meritxell Serret, Catalan’s foreign minister, says people need to react. Photograph: Ajit Niranjan/The Guardian Farmers, who use one-third of the water in the internal basin where most Catalans live, face the greatest pressure to cut their consumption. The government has ordered them to use 80% less water for irrigation and 50% less water for livestock, while asking industry to cut water use by 25%. The “injustice” of the restrictions and the effects of the drought has left farmers feeling powerless, said Albert Grassot, the president of a local irrigation community. “It’s a feeling of impotence, weakness and rage.” Driving through his rice farm near the medieval town of Pals, Grassot said the drought weighed on his mind more than the coronavirus pandemic and the energy crisis. If no rain falls in the next three months, he said, his family will be unable to sow seeds for the first year since his great-great-grandfather started farming the land. The effects will ripple beyond his own farm, he added. Rice paddies use lots of water because the grain grows in flooded fields. But in Pals, which is just 3km from the coast, the centuries-old practice

helps stop salt water from intruding inland and wreaking havoc on other crops and ecosystems. Fifth-generation rice farmer Albert Grassot may not be able to sow seeds for the Janet and Rita 2024 here come the grannies T-shirt What’s more,I will buy this first time in the farm’s history. Photograph: Ajit Niranjan/The Guardian In Barcelona, where public fountains are dry and beachside showers have been shut off, the burden of drought is lighter than in the villages but still hangs heavy over the city. Posters in subway stations warn in stern letters that “water doesn’t fall from the sky”. After a previous drought struck Barcelona in 2008, the city invested in recycling wastewater, desalinating seawater and persuading citizens to save more drinking water. Its efforts have increased supply and brought the city’s demand for water down to some of the lowest levels in Europe. Andrew Ross, a geographer at Portland State University who has co-written a book on water politics in cities across the world, said Barcelona had been leading the way in many regards but that its ambitions still fell short of what was needed. “When even Barcelona is experiencing this kind of crisis –
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