Speaking to Lusa, the president of RTA said that the
proposals, agreed with business associations in the sector and the Portuguese
Environment Agency (APA), join a diverse range of actions that are already
being adopted in tourism and hospitality to reduce water consumption.
“We have sent measures that address various areas of
activity in the tourism sector, in particular the hotel industry, because the
golf courses are already being worked on, course by course, with the Portuguese
Environment Agency, as a result of a work that we started in 2020 with the
[Algarve] Water Efficiency Plan”, stated João Fernandes.
The RTA proposal was “based” on “four areas”, such as
“management, in which tourist developments propose to carry out regular audits
of water consumption”, and the “involvement of customers and staff in the
detection of losses”, allowing the “adoption of more responsible practices in
the use of water”, he said.
Reinforcement of information to customers on “procedures for
changing sheets and towels, establishing a minimum period of use of towels of
two days”, as well as training workers in specific sections, such as laundries,
to adopt behaviours that promote water savings are other aspects of the RTA
proposals, he added.
reducing irrigation to once a day on the golf courses would save 100 times that!
By João from Algarve on 03 Aug 2022, 08:19
This token effort will make very little difference. The Algarve needs a solid short, medium, and long term strategy to properly address the worsening lack of water. Now stop dabbling and get on with it!
By Paolito from Algarve on 03 Aug 2022, 10:44
The Algarve is surrounded by sea and bathed in sunshine... Solar powered desalination plants make perfect sense.
By Scott from Algarve on 03 Aug 2022, 23:18
Uh, you closed the municipal free swimming pools but opened the Algarve Waterpark last week which is to pay someone to make a profit; doesn't sound economically fair to taxpayers. Maybe Andre Ventura (Chenga) will ask about this? I mean I'm glad to hear you're all talking about cutbacks but it's just not directed at the most affluent.
By Wesley from USA on 04 Aug 2022, 05:08
Lagos municipslity still has its fountains on and is still watering the green spaces including the grass roundabout in front of the psp station which noone would mind being dry. Sure, the public swimmingpool is clised but that happens every year in august, not specifically to save water. I thought the AMAL hsd decided they wanted to cut back on water use by turning of fountains and irrigation. What shoukd a person think if even the municipalities don't want to save water
By Patricia from Algarve on 10 Aug 2022, 21:38
Ban private swimming pools, golf course irrigation and Avocado farming.
By Ian from Beiras on 31 Mar 2023, 08:15