Ruins of a long-sunken Greek village emerge as drought saps vital reservoir

6 September 2024, 16:04

Building ruins visible next to a lake
Greece Sunken Village. Picture: PA

Dry winters and record-hot summers mean the reservoirs supplying drinking water to Greece’s capital, Athens, are at their lowest in 16 years.

Like ghosts from the past, sunken villages at the bottom of water reservoirs are not meant to be seen. But the ruins of Kallio in the mountains of central Greece are becoming very much visible — and they have a warning to deliver.

As an unprecedented drought induced by climate change rampages across much of southern Europe this summer, reserves at the artificial Lake Mornos — the biggest of the four reservoirs supplying drinking water to Greece’s capital, Athens — have hit their lowest in 16 years.

The receding waters have exposed what was left of Kallio, a village submerged in the late 1970s to create the reservoir some 200 kilometres (125 miles) from Athens.

Inside a ruined building
The window and the door of a building are seen in the sunken Kallio village (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Colonies of freshwater mussels sprout from cracks in the muddy stonework — the now-empty shells tinkling like wind chimes in the breeze, blending with the sound of cowbells from herds grazing around the lake.

Greek authorities insist there is no cause for alarm, yet.

But if the drought continues and no action is taken, Athens could run out of water in about four years.

Officials advise Athenians to be conscious of their water consumption and preserve where they can.

Costas Koutsoubas, deputy mayor of the surrounding Doris municipality, says he is concerned for the future after a drought has lasted for three years.

Greece Sunken Village
Cows graze at the eroding shoreline of the artificial Mornos Lake, the biggest of the four reservoirs supplying drinking water to Greece’s capital which is at its lowest level in 16 years (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

“If the same weather pattern persists, if it doesn’t rain enough and there’s no snow, then next year we’ll be talking about a dramatic situation,” he says.

“We need it to pour in buckets, night and day, for five days.”

According to Eydap, the Athens water commission, total reserves for the city of about 3.6 million people fell to 678 million cubic meters in early September, from 1.13 billion cubic meters two years previously.

Lake Mornos now has about 335 million cubic meters of water — from 592 million in September 2022. That’s the lowest since 2008 when the lake’s reserves fell to 210 million cubic meters.

And it’s not just Athens. Over the past two years, most of Greece has suffered dry winters and record-hot summers, which contributed to a spate of destructive summer wildfires.

Last month, a blaze north east of Athens gutted scores of homes and scorched a land area almost twice the size of Manhattan.

Wildfire rages
A wildfire near Athens gutted scores of homes and scorched land (AP Photo/Aggelos Barai)

As the tourism-reliant country sees record numbers of foreign arrivals — and a summer spike in water consumption — some parts of the country face cuts in drinking water, empty irrigation reservoirs and drying boreholes.

Last week, the Environment and Energy Ministry said Eydap would reopen existing boreholes north of Athens and draw water from a fallback reservoir.

It would also take additional action over the next four years, to reduce network leaks, tap rivers further afield and recycle wastewater for irrigation and industrial use, the ministry said.

“Finally, if the circumstances require it, at some later point, water-saving actions will be implemented,” a ministry statement said without elaborating.

“Everyone is advised to join in the common effort through rational use of water reserves,” it added.

Greece Sunken Village
The artificial Mornos Lake (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

There is concern that more — and worse — is coming. Climate change, with human-generated greenhouse gas emissions and rising temperatures, has increased the risk of droughts.

Back when the reservoir was created, Kallio’s 60 to 70 village homes and a half-dozen water mills seemed a small sacrifice for the greater good. The few of its inhabitants who didn’t move to Athens or other cities relocated to higher ground, above the lake.

With the reservoir levels sinking, they can now see the ruins of their old homes.

“We were very upset to leave, it was a great village,” said Constantinos Gerodimos, a 90-year-old farmer.

“We had lots of water, orchards with fruit trees, you name it,” he said. “People from other villages would come here to get water.”

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Met officers were unaware that Hezbollah is a proscribed terror group

Fury as Met officers policing London march 'unaware' that Hezbollah are proscribed terror group

Ali Abbasi said he would meet Donald Trump to discuss the film

Donald Trump biopic director says 'he'd like former president for film’s marketing team' after scathing attack

A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket with the Europa Clipper spacecraft aboard launches from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral on October 14

Rocket blasts off to Jupiter moon to investigate 'potential for habitable worlds beyond Earth'

This illustration provided by NASA depicts the Europa Clipper spacecraft above the surface of the moon Europa, foreground, and Jupiter behind

NASA to send spaceship on 1.8 billion mile mission to explore life on Jupiter

BORDENTOWN, NJ -7 NOV 2020- View of the Bordentown train station, a New Jersey Transit railway station in Bordentown, a historic town in Burlington Co

One dead and multiple injured after train crashes into tree

Dawn Sturgess, 44,

What were the Salisbury Poisonings? Inquiry opens into Novichok death

Hezbollah has launched the biggest attack on Israel since the October 7 massacre - as a barrage of drones injures dozens in the northern town of Binyamina.

Four Israeli soldiers killed and dozens injured in Hezbollah drone attack on IDF base

UN peacekeepers have been left requiring treatment after they report the IDF forcing entry to their compound in southern Lebanon.

IDF forces entry to UN compound in Lebanon after Netanyahu says troops are a 'human shield for Hezbollah'

Christopher Columbus 'kept secret he was Jewish' as DNA testing reveals Spanish roots, solving 500 year mystery

Christopher Columbus 'kept secret he was Jewish' as DNA testing reveals Spanish roots, solving 500 year mystery

Cluster of light brown galerina marginata mushrooms, toxic fungi specie from Europe

'Mass casualty incident' sees 11 children hospitalised after eating 'toxic mushrooms'

P&O Ferries owner 'will attend' PM's investment summit despite Haigh's 'cowboy operator' comments

P&O Ferries owner's £1bn investment 'will go ahead' in lead up to PM's investment summit despite Haigh row

EU leaders 'outraged' at Israel as nation urged to stop shooting at UN peacekeepers in Lebanon

UN reports fifth peacekeeper wounded in Lebanon as EU leaders condemn 'deliberate targeting' of UNIFIL soldiers

US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala

Kamala Harris has 'physical and mental resiliency' to be president, says doctor

P&O Ferries owner 'will attend' PM's investment summit despite Haigh's 'cowboy operator' comments

P&O Ferries owner 'will attend' PM's investment summit despite Haigh's 'cowboy operator' comments

A chilling 'underwater boom' could be the last trace of the doomed MH370 flight which vanished from flight radar screens a decade ago and was never seen again.

Mysterious 'underwater boom' could finally reveal fate of flight MH370 after vanishing 10 years ago in Indian Ocean

'Not the view of the government': Starmer rebukes P&O 'cowboy operator' as Labour MPs line-up to back Haigh

'Not the view of the government': Starmer rebukes P&O 'cowboy operator' remarks as Labour MPs back Haigh