In the Algarve, a region of southern Portugal regularly hit by drought, farmers are showing the way towards rational consumption of the water they have to share with millions of tourists.
Category
đź—ž
NewsTranscript
00:00Look at this. Nothing gets in here. Nothing.
00:03If a drop falls here, it's gone.
00:09Water is rare in Algarve, a tourist paradise in the south of Portugal.
00:14Who realizes it as soon as they land.
00:17In recent years, it has been raining little and thousands of hectares of plantations are threatened.
00:22So how to make sure that there will be enough water, both for tourists and for farmers?
00:27Well, by changing our practices a bit. That's what we're going to see.
00:30Albufeira Balneary
00:35On the heights of the Albufeira Balneary, the Quinta do Canhoto is a vineyard that offers visits and tastings.
00:42And if good wine makes tourists smile, the reality is more difficult in the vineyards.
00:47It is said a lot that there will be a shortage of water in the future.
00:50No, there is no shortage here. We have to live with the restrictions.
00:56The vineyard relies on technology.
00:59An underground irrigation system has reduced water consumption by limiting evaporation.
01:04These connected probes measure the humidity of the soil in real time and allow watering when necessary.
01:11Normally, we used to irrigate four or six days in advance.
01:15We can delay the irrigation for another two or three days.
01:19This means that at the end of a campaign, there is less water and the irrigation is better.
01:24And the quality of the wine is much better.
01:30These winemakers are accompanied by the Portuguese association Smart Farm Collab,
01:34which wants to democratize technology in the vineyards.
01:37Conscientialization has to be the basis for promoting biodiversity,
01:43taking care of natural resources and the soil.
01:46And obviously, taking care of all these aspects, we can have a well-kept and improved agriculture.
01:55We took the road towards the Quinta do Freixo, an organic farm of 800 hectares.
02:03Against drought, the owner relies on regenerative agriculture.
02:07And for his soil to remain covered, he relies on his animals.
02:11We tend to think that sheep only survive if there is grazing.
02:16But without sheep, there is no grazing either, because this is an interdependence.
02:20For each percentage of organic matter that is incorporated into the soil,
02:23we increase in many cubic meters its ability to capture water.
02:29The farm, which has turned its back on agriculture, has invested in ecotourism.
02:35Our solution here was tourism and becoming our biggest consumers.
02:40And this allows us to have more interesting margins,
02:43and therefore to have a viable business and a protected environment.
02:50Nothing like a fig from Algarve to regain energy.
02:53It's your favorite fruit, isn't it?
02:54See you soon on the road in Water Matters.