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Cyprus has announced plans to subsidise private hotel desalination plants to address water shortages during peak tourist seasons. The initiative comes as the Mediterranean island faces critically low water levels following its second-driest winter in a decade.

The government will provide £2.6 million (€3 million) over two years to support hotel desalination projects, simplifying regulations for small-scale plants in the tourism and agricultural sectors. An additional £6.9 million (€8 million) will be invested in repairing water infrastructure to reduce significant leakage issues, currently estimated at 40%.

The country is expanding its desalination capacity, with four mobile plants due to begin operating in October. These will complement the existing network of four permanent facilities, though one remains inactive due to fire damage. Currently, the permanent plants produce 235,000 cubic metres of fresh water daily.

Cyprus’s dam network, the most extensive per capita in Europe, is operating at just 24.6% capacity, compared to 47.2% last year. With tourism contributing 13.5% to the nation’s GDP and visitor numbers reaching record levels exceeding 4 million in 2023, the water security measures are deemed crucial for the island’s economic stability.

Read the original article here: https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/cyprus-to-fund-desalination-plants-at-hotels-to-reduce-impact-of-water-shortages-on-tourism/ar-AA1BHQMX?ocid=BingNewsVerp