/ 19 January 2007

Malaria returns to Italy

Sandwiched between temperate Europe and African heat, Italy is on the front line of climate change and is witnessing a rise in tropical diseases such as malaria and tick-borne encephalitis, a new report says.

Italy was declared free of malaria in 1970, but it is making a comeback, said the Italian environmental organisation Legambiente. Tick-borne encephalitis, a virus that attacks the nerve system, is also on the way back. While only 18 cases had been reported before 1993, 100 have been since, mostly around Venice.

A third ailment, visceral leishmaniasis, carried by sandflies and potentially fatal, is expanding rapidly, the report added. Cases in Italy have risen to 150 a year from 50 before 2000, with the southern region of Campania a hot spot.

Of six sustained droughts in Italy in the past 60 years four have occurred since 1990. The average temperature has increased by 0,4°C in the north in 20 years and by 0,7°C in the south. Ten million hectares “are at risk of desertification”.

Twenty percent of the fish now swimming in the Mediterranean, including barracuda, are types that have migrated from the Red Sea as water temperatures rise.

“We are at the southern edge of the globe’s temperate area and that is why Italy is being particularly hit by the collapse of the climatic equilibrium,” said Legambiente’s director general, Francesco Ferrante. — Â