Water

Slovenians win battle for drinking water in referendum

Photo: Slika: Referendum za pitno vodo/Facebook

Published

July 13, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 13, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Environmental associations and activists in Slovenia have won a great victory in the fight for the protection of water. In a referendum on drinking water, 86.6% or more then 674,000 citizens voted against changes to the water act adopted by the parliament.

NGOs and experts have collected more than 50,000 signatures to hold a referendum to stop the implementation of the changes to the water law, passed by the Slovenian parliament in March.

Citizens believe that the changes to the water law will endanger drinking water sources

Although the Ministry of Environment and Spatial Planning claimed that the changes prohibit the construction of industrial and private facilities on the banks of rivers and lakes, environmental activists insisted that the amendments to the law would do the opposite – allow the construction of such facilities, which would endanger sources of drinking water. The results of the referendum clearly backed the stance of environmental activists.

The referendum question was: Are you in favor of the changes to the water act which were adopted by the parliament on March 30, 2021?

46.6% of registered voters turned out, and 86.6% of them said no to the amendments to the water act

In order for the changes to be abolished in the referendum, at least a fifth of the total number of voters had to vote, which is about 340,000, and that was achieved because the percentage was 46.6. And then it was necessary for a majority of voters to say no to the amendments, which also happened.

In November 2016, Slovenia became the second state in the European Union to include the right to water into its constitution, declaring water a public good and preventing its commercialization. The environmental impact of the construction of small hydropower plants in the Western Balkans put water at the top of the agenda among green activists.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Brent oil on track for highest ever monthly jump in March

Brent oil on track for highest-ever monthly jump in March

31 March 2026 - The Middle East war shook the oil market, with the benchmark Brent crude oil price spiking more than 55% since the end of February

Antalya in Turkey to install power turbines inside water supply pipelines

Antalya in Turkey to install power turbines inside water supply pipelines

18 March 2026 - Projects are underway in Antalya in southern Turkey for two hydropower turbines totaling 1.9 MW inside water pipelines

Threat mass exodus desalination plants bombed in Iran Gulf countries

Threat of mass exodus as desalination plants targeted in Gulf countries, Iran

09 March 2026 - The Iran war could heavily disrupt the water supply in the region, and desalination plants in particular, alongside environmental disasters

Research project in Romania explores the use of agrisolar systems with batteries in agriculture

Researchers in Romania developing agrisolar system with batteries

27 January 2026 - An agrisolar power plant with batteries is being set up in a research and demonstration project in Romania