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What happened to Venice's planned flood barriers?

Clare Speak
Clare Speak - [email protected]
What happened to Venice's planned flood barriers?
Venice is once again submerged after exceptionally high tides swept the city this week. Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

After Venice was left devastated once again by exceptionally high tides this week, many are asking what happened to the city's long-awaited flood barriers. Are they still being built? Why has it taken so long? And will they really prevent such disasters in future?

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On Tuesday night, the city of Venice was devastated by a particularly intense acqua alta, or high water, the name given to exceptionally high tides in the Adriatic Sea, which peaked at 1.87 metres (six feet) - just short of the 1.94 metre record set during the “great flood” of 1966.

READ ALSO: Venice flooding: St Mark's priceless mosaics drowned in sewage

Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

But while this week's flood is the worst the city has seen in half a century, it isn't entirely unexpected. Late autumn and winter is the season for acqua alta in Venice, and there were similar scenes of devastation at the end of October last year, when another unusually high tide flooded the lagoon city.

The mayor of Venice, Luigi Brugnaro, is this week among those blaming the floods on climate change, while environmental groups say that unfortunately such incidents can only be expected to happen more frequently in future

What's being done to protect Venice from flooding?

Both Venetian locals and visitors are now asking why, particularly if the floods are fairly predictable and expected to worsen, more isn't being done to protect the lagoon city.

Specifically, they ask what's happened to the multi-billion-euro flood barrier system that Venice has been waiting for since 1991.

Furious Venice residents lashed out at authorities on Wednesday, saying this week's devastating flood could have been prevented if only the long-awaited flood defence system, known as Mose (meaning Moses), had been put in place as promised.

"They've done nothing, neglected it. It doesn't work and they have stolen six billion euros. The politicians should all be put in jail," Venice resident Dino Perzolla, 62, told AFP.

READ ALSO: Anger in Venice after record flooding devastates city

Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

Politicians themselves said the barrier would have stopped the flooding. Mayor Brugnaro as well as Veneto regional president Luca Zaia were among those blaming the lack of flood defences for the “apocalyptic “ situation in Venice, telling Italian media on Wednesday that “half the city is under water because Mose is not yet active.”

The system of flood defences, comprised of 78 gates that can be raised to protect Venice's lagoon during high tides, is one of the biggest civil engineering projects in the world.

Mose has, so far, cost upwards of 5.5 billion euros, and has long been mired in cost issues, delays, corruption scandals, and criticism.

When will the flood barrier be ready to use?

After construction work on the barrier began in 2003, the original completion date was set for 2014, then 2016, and the latest official estimates now say the barrier system will be ready to use by the end of 2021.

Construction work on the barrier is 94 percent complete, according to the company building it, Italian newspaper Il Post reported on Wednesday.

But recently, the project has been plagued by technical problems. An attempt to test part of the barrier earlier this month caused worrying vibrations, and engineers discovered underwater parts had rusted, stalling the project further.

In fact, some reports say the rusting and leaking found on existing parts of the barrier system is so serious that it could take a decade to repair.

Work on part of the barrier in progress in 2013. Photo: Marco Sabadin/AFP

The metal hinges, supposed have a 100-year lifespan, are reportedly rusting after less than ten years under water.

The La Nuova Venezia newspaper reported in July 2019 that the Consorzio Venezia Nuova - the group of companies responsible for building the barriers - and the government-appointed supervising body, the Provveditorato, was putting contracts out to tender for the repair work on the rusting hollow steel gates, which are attached by hinges to concrete bases sunk into the bottom of the lagoon.

The Provveditorato reportedly says these structures are already "seriously degraded", and that inspection corridors inside the concrete foundations are also leaking, meaning parts will have to be replaced.

Part of the Mose barrier in Venice's lagoon. Photo: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP

The report says this repair work is estimated to take ten years and cost €34 million.

It's not clear whether this will mean Venice has to wait longer for the gates to become operational, or whether the work can be done while the barriers are on standby to be raised.

Will the barriers actually stop Venice from flooding?

The project has been controversial from the beginning, and opinion remains divided over whether the Mose system, when ready to use, will really be able to prevent the city from flooding as hoped.

While citizens have long worried about the astronomically high cost of construction, NGOs, engineering firms, academics and the municipality of Venice itself have long questioned the project's viability and the barrier's stability in the face of rising sea levels.

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One analysis of the project in 2015 concluded that “The MOSE gates cannot face a sea-level rise because they are not a water tight barrier. Their oscillations with waves will enlarge the spaces between the gates and will permit sea water to raise the lagoon level even when the gates are closed.”

Meanwhile, environmental groups and the EU Commission have also expressed concerns about the structure's current and future effects on the lagoon's fragile ecosystem.

UNESCO has also threatened to put Venice on its list of endangered heritage sites, citing issues caused by huge cruise ships being allowed to dock in the city's fragile lagoon, and also the effects of construction work for the Mose project on the local ecosystem.

While it's debatable whether the barriers will actually work as hoped, and it's impossible to say when or even if Venetians can expect to see the barriers in operation, the only real certainty for now is that work on the project will continue.

 Photo: Miguel Medina/AFP

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Anonymous 2019/11/17 23:50
corruption has and will always be a problem in all governments and you can't fix anything without fixing corruption

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