The stark message is part of a European Commission communiqué imploring EU governments to pick up the pace in their preparations to counter climate change, arguing they have fallen well short of what is necessary — a blunt warning that will serve as the EU’s last major climate initiative ahead of June’s bloc-wide elections.
In an undated draft of the text seen by POLITICO, the Commission identifies water shortages as an issue that threatens nearly every aspect of life: the food we eat, the water we drink and the infrastructure that powers and transports society, not to mention basic economic activities and human health.
“These risks can manifest in multiple forms, some of which include … increased competition over water resources across sectors and uses, including potential risk of conflicts within and among the Member States over transboundary water resources,” the draft states.
Some regions are already bickering over supplies. In Spain, drought-stricken Catalonia is trying to persuade the Spanish central government to divert river water from neighbouring Aragón, fanning political tensions. France last year saw violent clashes over water reservoir plans.
The Commission’s missive will accompany the first-ever European Climate Risk Assessment, a comprehensive European Environment Agency (EEA) report set for release on Monday.
An increase in water extremes such as floods and droughts is only one of the climate threats facing Europe. The EEA assessment “identified 36 key risks for Europe, several of them already at catastrophic levels and of high urgency,” the Commission document says, without providing further detail.
In general, the Commission says, the EU can expect “more disasters such as droughts, floods, wildfires, diseases, crop failures, heat deaths, infrastructure damage, and structural changes to the environment” — but warns that the bloc isn’t planning for those risks.
“Both the EU and its Member States must become significantly better at preparing for and effectively addressing climate risks,” the document says, cautioning that even when there are policies in place, “implementation currently falls short of providing reasonable assurance.”
With green policies facing backlash across the EU, the Commission tries to make an economic case for making the Continent more resilient to climate risks. According to a “conservative estimate,” it argues, worsening climate impacts could slash the bloc’s economic output by 7 per cent until the year 2100.
“Climate resilience is a matter of competitiveness for economies and companies, and thus jobs. It is a matter of economic survival for rural and coastal areas, farmers, foresters and fishermen,” the document stresses.
Regarding water-related risks, the Commission estimates that the EU could face €1.6 trillion in annual damages from coastal flooding. Since 1980, droughts and floods have cost the EU an estimated €9 billion and €170 billion a year, respectively.
“Insufficient or delayed implementation of integrated water management will be unaffordable,” the document reads.
And it’s not just water. The Commission notes that while infectious diseases such as the West Nile virus are expected to become endemic in parts of Europe, “effective medical countermeasures … are scarce or yet to be developed.” Additionally, “all transport infrastructure is at risk from climate change” but there is insufficient investment thus far to mitigate the risks.
Climate impacts are also likely to exacerbate inequality among and within EU countries, with southern Europe hit worse than the rest of the Continent.
While largely calling on capitals to act, the EU executive does give itself some homework in the document. The Commission will step up workers’ protections to risks such as heat waves, set “minimum climate resilience requirements” for all EU spending and publish a study in late 2025 on preparing the agricultural sector for climate change.
Similarly, Brussels is planning to issue more guidance on making rural landscapes more resilient to climate risks, building on top of the bloc’s new nature restoration rules.
The controversial law, which scraped through several votes in the European Parliament and now faces a tricky final vote among EU countries, underpins several resilience measures and is mentioned throughout the document.
Perhaps in a nod to the controversy surrounding the law — which faced a backlash partly fueled by misinformation spread by industry groups and conservative lawmakers — the document lists “combatting disinformation” as a key tool in strengthening Europe’s climate preparedness.
“The Commission will contribute to efforts to monitor and analyze how disinformation narratives enter the public space and impact opinion and behaviour,” the text says. “It will enhance the use of relevant policy tools, digital solutions, and communication approaches to fight climate disinformation.”
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