‘I couldn’t look’: European farmers on losing crops as the industry collides with worsening drought

The Guardian 1 min read 11 hours ago

<p>Global heating means annual drought losses across Europe could reach €17.5bn. Shipping and power generation are also being affected by low water levels</p><p>Crumbling a fistful of sandy soil by his dried-up sunflower field, Thomas Goebel pointed to one of the many casualties of this year’s drought: a bright green machine that resembles a tractor crossed with a biplane.</p><p>The <em>Gurkenflieger</em> (cucumber plane) used to roll proudly through his fields with farmhands in the wings plucking vegetables to make salty-sweet-sour Spreewald gherkins. Goebel stopped using it for production five years ago – his pickles could not compete with supermarket prices – and a recent experiment letting tourists ride inside generated enthusiasm but little profit.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/sep/28/i-couldnt-look-european-farmers-on-losing-crops-as-the-industry-collides-with-worsening-drought">Continue reading...</a>
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