Flooding in Venice worsens off-season amid climate change
Venice's unique topography, built on log piles among canals, has made it particularly vulnerable to climate change. Rising sea levels are increasing the frequency of high tides that inundate the 1,600-year-old Italian lagoon city, which is also gr...

The repeated invasion of brackish lagoon water into St Mark's Basilica this summer is a quiet reminder that the threat hasn't receded.
"I can only say that in August, a month when this never used to happen, we had tides over a metre five times. I am talking about the month of August, when we are quiet," St Mark's chief caretaker, Carlo Alberto Tesserin, told The Associated Press.
Venice's unique topography, built on log piles among canals, has made it particularly vulnerable to climate change. Rising sea levels are increasing the frequency of high tides that inundate the 1,600-year-old Italian lagoon city, which is also gradually sinking.
It is the fate of coastal cities like Venice that will be on the minds of climate scientists and global leaders meeting in Glasgow, Scotland, at a UN climate conference that begins October 31.
The city's interplay of canals and architecture, of natural habitat and human ingenuity, also has earned it recognition as a Unesco World Heritage site for its outstanding universal value, a designation put at risk of late because of the impact of over-tourism and cruise ship traffic. It escaped the endangered list after Italy banned cruise ships from passing through St Mark's Basin, but alarm bells are still ringing.
Sitting at Venice's lowest spot, St Mark's Basilica offers a unique position to monitor the impact of rising seas on the city. The piazza outside floods at 80 cm (around 30 inches), and water passes the narthex into the church at 88 cm (34.5 inches), which has been reinforced up from a previous 65 cm (25.5 inches).
"Conditions are continuing to worsen since the flooding of November 2019. We therefore have the certainty that in these months, flooding is no longer an occasional phenomenon. It is an everyday occurrence," said Tesserin, whose honorific, First Procurator of St Mark's, dates back to the ninth century.
Exceptional floods over 140 cm (4 feet, 7 inches) also are accelerating. That mark has been hit 25 times since Venice starting keeping such records in 1872. Two-thirds of those have been registered in the last 20 years, with five, or one-fifth of the total, from November 12 to December 23, 2019.
Venice's defence has been entrusted to the Moses system of moveable underwater barriers, a project costing around 6 billion euros (nearly $7 billion) and which, after decades of cost overruns, delays and a bribery scandal, is still officially in the testing phase.
Following the devastation of the 2019 floods, the Rome government put the project under ministry control to speed its completion, and last year start activating the barriers when floods of 1.3 metres (4 feet, 3 inches) are imminent.
The barriers have been raised 20 times since October 2020, sparing the city a season of serious flooding but not from the lower-level tides that are becoming more frequent.
The extraordinary commissioner, Elisabetta Spitz, stands by the soundness of the undersea barriers, despite concerns by scientists and experts that their usefulness may be outstripped within decades because of climate change. The project has been delayed yet again, until 2023, with another 500 million euros ($580 million) in spending, for "improvements" that Spitz said will ensure its long-term efficiency.
"We can say that the effective life of the Moses is 100 years, taking into account the necessary maintenance and interventions that will be implemented," Spitz said.
Paolo Vielmo, an engineer who has written expert reports on the project, points out that the sea level rise was projected at 22 centimeters (8 1/2 inches) when the Moses was first proposed more than 30 years ago, far below the UN scientists' current worse-case scenario of 80 cm.
"That puts the Moses out of contention," he said.
According to current plans, the Moses barriers won't be raised for floods of 1.1 metres (3 feet, 7 inches) until the project receives final approval. That leaves St Mark's exposed.
Tesserin is overseeing work to protect the Basilica by installing a glass wall around its base, which eventually will protect marshy lagoon water from seeping inside, where it deposits salt that eats away at marble columns, wall cladding and stone mosaics. The project, which continues to be interrupted by high tides, was supposed to be finished by Christmas. Now Tesserin says they will be lucky to have it finished by Easter.
Regular high tides elicit a blase response from Venetians, who are accustomed to lugging around rubber boots at every flood warning, and delight from tourists, fascinated by the sight of St Mark's golden mosaics and domes reflected in rising waters. But businesses along St Mark's Square increasingly see themselves at ground zero of the climate crisis.
"We need to help this city. It was a light for the world, but now it needs the whole world to understand it," said Annapaola Lavena, speaking from behind metal barriers that kept waters reaching 1.05 metres (3 feet, 5 inches) from invading her marble-floored cafe.
"The acqua alta is getting worse, and it completely blocks business. Venice lives thanks to its artisans and tourism. If there is no more tourism, Venice dies," she explained. "We have a great responsibility in trying to save it, but we are suffering a lot."
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.