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March 11, 2025

Spain near end of four-year drought: weather agency

A general view of the marshes of Donana National Park, in Almonte, Huelva, on February 28, 2025.
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A general view of the marshes of Donana National Park, in Almonte, Huelva, on February 28, 2025.

A drought that has parched fields and prompted water restrictions in Spain since 2021 could be over soon thanks to recent abundant rainfall, national weather agency AEMET said on Tuesday.

When yearly precipitation figures are compared with the that has fallen in the past year, "we cannot speak of drought in Spain", AEMET spokesman Ruben del Campo told a press conference.

But a long-term measurement taking into account precipitation over the three previous years shows that the "amount of rain accumulated... remains below normal" in the country on the climate crisis frontline.

"With the amount of rain falling now in March, it cannot be ruled out that this situation ends up being reversed," Del Campo said, adding "it is probable that we emerge in March" from the long-term .

Downpours in the first nine days of March have drenched Spain with an amount of rain that usually falls during the entire month, he said.

The recent rainfall included Spain's wettest October on record, which culminated in the historic floods that devastated the eastern Valencia region and killed 232 people according to a government toll.

Scientists say driven by human activity is increasing the intensity, frequency and duration of extreme weather events such as droughts and floods.

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Spain's four-year drought may soon end due to recent heavy rainfall, according to the national weather agency. While annual precipitation suggests the drought is over, long-term data still shows below-normal rainfall. March's significant rainfall could reverse this trend. October was the wettest on record, leading to severe floods. Climate change is intensifying extreme weather events like droughts and floods.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.