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Drought and poor water management devastate southern Hungary’s fields

Trending:Trump-Zelenskyy meetNew Jersey helicopter crashBrigitte Bardot diesChina military drills near Taiwan2025 year enderDrought and poor water management devastate southern Hungary’s fieldsFP News Desk • December 29, 2025, 11:23:53 ISTWhatsapp Facebook TwitterSouthern Hungary’s Homokhatsag region is drying out as climate change and poor water management turn once-fertile farmland into near desert. Farmers are now using treated thermal water to mimic natural flooding to slow desertification. AdvertisementSubscribe Join Us+ Follow us On GoogleChoose Firstpost on GoogleOszkár Nagyapáti, farmer and member of the volunteer water guardians, stands in a hole in Kiskunmajsa, Hungary, Tuesday, July 29, 2025. Image Credit: APThe region in southern Hungary, once an important site for agriculture, has become increasingly parched and dry.

Oszkár Nagyáti, farmer and member of the volunteer water guardians, stands in a hole in Kiskunmajsa, Hungary, Tuesday, July 29, 2025. Image

Oszkár Nagyáti, farmer and member of the volunteer water guardians, stands in a hole in Kiskunmajsa, Hungary, Tuesday, July 29, 2025. Image

Credit: AP

Key Highlights

  • Where a variety of crops and grasses once filled the fields, today there are wide cracks in the soil and growing sand dunes more reminiscent of the Sahara Desert than Central Europe.“It’s much worse, and it’s getting worse year after year,” a farmer said as cloudy liquid slowly seeped into the hole.
  • ”Where did so much water go?
  • It’s unbelievable,” he added. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS ADThe region, known as the Homokhatsag, has been described by some studies as semiarid.
  • In parts of Africa, the American Southwest or Australian Outback is characterized by very little rain, dried-out wells and a water table plunging ever deeper underground. More from World Mapping 2025: A timeline of global diplomatic wins and woes — Trump cloud looming large UK chefs now need expensive electrocution devices as Starmer govt bans boiling lobsters aliveFields that in previous centuries would be regularly flooded by the Danube and Tisza Rivers have, through a combination of climate change-related droughts and poor water retention practices, become nearly unsuitable for crops and wildlife. A group of farmers and other volunteers, are trying to save the region and their lands from total desiccation using a resource for which Hungary is famous: thermal water. According to the water guardians’ plan, the water, cooled and purified, would be used to flood a 2 1⁄2-hectare (6-acre) low-lying field — a way of mimicking the natural cycle of flooding that channelizing the rivers had ended. Quick ReadsView AllMapping 2025: A timeline of global diplomatic wins and woes — Trump cloud looming largeUK chefs now need expensive electrocution devices as Starmer govt bans boiling lobsters aliveFollowing another hot, dry summer this year, the water guardians blocked a series of sluices along a canal, and the repurposed water from the spa began slowly gathering in the low-lying field. Persistent droughts in the Great Hungarian Plain have threatened desertification, a process where vegetation recedes because of high heat and low rainfall.
  • STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS ADWeather-damaged crops have dealt significant blows to the country’s overall gross domestic product, prompting Prime Minister Viktor Orban to announce this year the creation of a “drought task force” to deal with the problem.(With inputs from AP)Follow Firstpost on Google.
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  1. Drought and poor water management devastate southern Hungary’s fields

This quick summary is automatically generated using AI based on reports from multiple news sources. The content has not been reviewed or verified by humans. For complete details, accuracy, and context, please refer to the original published articles.

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