Almada water crisis: regulator demands answers as major pipe burst cuts six areas
Weeks of supply failures, a petition with thousands of signatures and now a major pipe rupture: Almada's water crisis has reached the national regulator.
Turning on the tap and getting nothing has become routine in parts of Almada. After weeks of supply failures — with Costa da Caparica, Sobreda and Capuchos among the worst-hit areas — ERSAR, Portugal’s water services regulator, has formally demanded explanations from Almada’s municipal water services (SMAS). Then on Sunday things got worse: a major rupture in a main pipe left six areas of the municipality without water.
Why is Almada running out of water?
SMAS blames the strain on the system on the heat and on the seasonal population surge, which sent consumption soaring. For many residents that explanation is not enough: a petition demanding urgent measures has gathered close to four thousand signatures, and shopkeepers say they have been running their businesses around the outages “for over a month”. Sunday’s rupture, cutting supply to six areas at once, exposed the network’s fragility at the worst possible moment.
What happens now?
The ball sits in two courts. With the regulator, which awaits the municipal utility’s explanation of the causes and its plan to stabilise supply. And with local politics, where the case has already produced a round of finger-pointing — the opposition blames decades of municipal management for the network’s decay, and the issue looks set to dominate Almada’s pre-election summer. Meanwhile, with the heat continuing, residents are left with the oldest advice in the book: keep the water bottles filled.
See also: the heatwave putting pressure on the country. The regulator’s role at ersar.pt.
Image: Juntas / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)