Cyclone Harry, Sicily inundated by 2 billion euros in damage: allocated resources cover only 5 percent

The damage assessment is ongoing. What emerges from the data of the Regional Civil Protection authority is incontestable: Cyclone Harry, which devastated Sicily between January 19 and 21, caused an estimated damage of between 1.5 and 2 billion euros. Stretches of coastline have been erased, railway infrastructure interrupted with rails suspended in mid-air, thousands of families evacuated. Facing this scenario, the State has allocated 103 million euros so far: just 5 percent of the total damage. According to the Più Uno Sicilia movement, 95 percent of the necessary resources are missing.

Technical estimates of the devastation

The Regional Civil Protection estimates quantify the damage at 741 million euros. This figure does not include indirect economic damage related to disruptions in productive, tourist, and agricultural activities. Adding these, the estimate reaches and exceeds 1.5 billion euros. The hardest-hit provinces are Catania with 244 million euros, Messina with 202.5 million, and Siracusa with 159.8 million. Sardinia recorded damage exceeding 500 million euros.

The event was characterized by sirocco gusts of up to 120 kilometers per hour, storm surge with waves up to 10 meters, and exceptional precipitation. In some areas, rainfall accumulation exceeded 300 millimeters.

Resource allocation: Numbers that fall short

The Sicilian Region allocated 70 million euros from its own resources. The national Government added 33 million through a civil protection ordinance, bringing the total allocation to 103 million. To these are added 20 million in already-approved regional funds, but the picture remains far from the actual needs of the territory.

The 100 million allocated by the Government for the national emergency were initially designated to cover first expenses incurred by municipalities: debris removal and restoration of essential services functionality. Only later, once the damage is precisely quantified, will further allocation for reconstruction proceed.

The Niscemi landslide: The tragedy of the displaced

In Niscemi, in the province of Caltanissetta, the situation is even more critical. A landslide of considerable proportions necessitated the evacuation of over 1,500 people. The ground movement, which began in the afternoon of January 25, has a front exceeding four kilometers in width and continues to expand.

According to statements by the national Civil Protection chief, the entire hillside on which the town is built is moving. Entire neighborhoods—Sante Croci, Trappeto, and via Popolo—have been evacuated. Mayor Massimiliano Conti reported that some areas will be declared "red zones," with families unable to return to their homes. A census is underway to determine who will need economic support.

Impact on the agricultural sector

The cyclone inflicted severe damage on the agricultural sector, with thousands of hectares of crops destroyed. In the territory of Burgio, in the province of Agrigento, citrus groves in the midst of harvest season were devastated by violent wind gusts. Losses in the Burgio territory alone amount to approximately 1.5 million euros, with thousands of fruits fallen to the ground in conditions rendering them unsellable.

In the Catania plain, around the Gornalunga river, arable land has been submerged by water. In the Ragusa and Messina areas, hay storage tunnels have been uncovered and greenhouses destroyed. Coldiretti Sicilia has already initiated procedures to request disaster status, anticipating further losses in the coming weeks.

Port infrastructure and road network

Along the Ionian coast, damage to infrastructure has been significant. In Lampedusa, the commercial dock—the island's sole vital artery for supplies and connections—risks structural collapse. Linosa has been literally cut off, with its road network completely destroyed.

State roads have suffered numerous interruptions. State Road 114, the coastal artery connecting Messina, Catania, and Siracusa, experienced three interruptions due to flooding and landslides between Sant'Alessio Siculo and Giardini Naxos. The Messina-Catania-Siracusa and Catania-Caltanissetta-Xirbi railway lines remained suspended for structural inspections and debris removal.

The national climate plan remains unfunded

The context in which this emergency occurs is that of a National Plan for Climate Change Adaptation (PNACC) approved in December 2023 but remaining substantially without funding. According to Legambiente and environmental organizations, the PNACC remained an "empty shell" during the 2025 budget law, with no allocation to implement the 361 identified actions.

The Plan identified Sicilian coasts as territory at the highest risk regarding the climate crisis, with increasingly violent meteorological events known as medicanes (tropical-characteristic cyclones in the Mediterranean). However, no financial resources were allocated to implement the coastal defense strategies provided for in the document.

The increasing frequency of extreme events

Cyclone Harry is not an isolated event. According to studies by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 74 percent of extreme weather events have been made more probable or intense by climate change. Research published by Climameter highlighted that Cyclone Harry's winds were four to eight kilometers per hour stronger than what would have occurred in a climate without global warming.

The Mediterranean is one of the world's climate crisis hotspots, with rising water temperatures favoring the formation of increasingly violent and frequent medicanes. Legambiente Sicilia emphasized how damage recorded along the coasts results from a "downward slope" in which climate crisis cumulates with decades of uncontrolled development and urbanization choices that have eliminated natural defenses, such as sand dunes.

Demands from the Più Uno Sicilia movement

The Più Uno Sicilia movement has advanced a series of requests to the Government and Region. According to leader Ernesto Maria Ruffini, Sicily is not a "periphery to be forgotten between one emergency and another" but the "heart of the Mediterranean," exposed on the front lines to the climate crisis.

The movement demands immediate allocation of at least 500 million euros for the emergency, drawing from the National Emergency Fund and remodulating spending priorities. It also contests the contrast between the 14 billion euros allocated for the Strait of Messina Bridge and insufficient funds for damaged infrastructure.

Beyond this, Più Uno Sicilia demands suspension of mortgages, local taxes, and pension contributions for citizens and businesses in affected areas, with automatic procedures; an extraordinary plan to secure Sicilian coasts; immediate implementation of the PNACC with financial allocation; strict restrictions on construction along the shore and relocation plans for at-risk structures; settlement of indemnities to destroyed businesses within 90 days; establishment of a public dashboard showing in real time every euro allocated, committed, and disbursed.

Transparency on spending remains opaque

Più Uno Sicilia has also requested that the Sicilian Region publish within 15 days a detailed report on funds allocated for the October 2024 Catania flooding (amount, committed, disbursed), funds for the 2024 drought emergency, and average disbursement times for indemnities to agricultural businesses.

The movement has sharply criticized the rhetoric of "a State close to its citizens" and the appointment of yet another extraordinary commissioner: "We do not accept talk of a 'gesture of solidarity' when families, businesses, and entire communities have lost everything."

The structural vulnerability of the territory

The picture emerging from the data shows a situation where allocated funding covers a minimal fraction of the damage, where critical infrastructure remains vulnerable despite being theoretically identified by the PNACC, and where transparency on spending from previous emergency interventions remains opaque.

Experts warn that without an adequately funded adaptation plan and without a revision of urbanization choices that have left coasts rigid and unable to absorb the impact of storm surge, damage from the next emergency could be even greater. Sicily remains on the front lines of the climate crisis's effects, with medicanes becoming increasingly probable and violent.

The Magical Night of San Lorenzo: Traditions and Celestial Curiosities

The Night of San Lorenzo, celebrated every August 10, is a fascinating celestial spectacle that captures the imagination of people around the world. This date is associated with traditions and beliefs that have their roots in past centuries, creating a deep connection between humanity and the starry sky.

Shooting Stars and Wishes

The Night of San Lorenzo is renowned for the Perseids, a shower of shooting stars crossing the sky. This celestial spectacle has inspired popular beliefs related to wishes: it is believed that expressing a wish while observing a shooting star increases the probability that it will come true. People gather outdoors, gazing upward, hoping to catch the perfect moment to make their wish.

The Traditions of Raising Glasses Under the Stars

One of the most fascinating traditions linked to the Night of San Lorenzo is that of raising glasses under the stars. It is believed that drinking from a glass or cup during this night brings luck and prosperity. People gather in gardens, terraces, and panoramic places, lifting their glasses in honor of the shooting stars. This symbolic gesture unites people with nature and the magic of the universe, as they toast to the shared experience.

Celestial Curiosities

Beyond established traditions, there are some curiosities that add further fascination to the Night of San Lorenzo. For example, the name "San Lorenzo" derives from the Christian martyr Lawrence of Rome, whose commemoration falls on this day. However, the connection with shooting stars is more closely tied to the Perseids, which have an astronomical origin.

Association with Art and Literature

The Night of San Lorenzo has inspired artists, poets, and writers throughout the centuries. From painting to poetry, this celestial phenomenon has found expression in many artistic forms. Artworks often depict figures expressing wishes under a starry sky, while the words of poets evoke the magical atmosphere and emotion of this moment.

Celestial Reflections

The Night of San Lorenzo is a special occasion in which the sky transforms into a spectacle of shooting stars, inspiring wishes and traditions rooted in the past. The gesture of raising glasses under the stars unites people in sharing and gratitude for the beauty of the natural world and the universe surrounding us. As the world advances, these traditions and this connection with the starry sky continue to capture the imagination, making the Night of San Lorenzo a timeless event.

Repopulating Small Villages: Solutions Presented at the Festival of 'Italy's Most Beautiful Villages'

In the picturesque setting of the village of Lucignano, the XV edition of the National Festival of 'Italy's Most Beautiful Villages' was held. Among exhibition stands, conferences, dances, and cooking shows, an opportunity was created to foster synergistic bonds and exchanges of ideas between representatives of those Italian realities that are, for the most part, marginalized from visitor and tourist flows. Indeed, hundreds of small "villages of Italy" are at risk of depopulation and consequent decay due to marginalization with respect to economic interests gravitating around tourism and commercial movement - as stated on the website of the Association 'Italy's Most Beautiful Villages'.

The Association Italy's Most Beautiful Villages

Born in 2001 at the initiative of the Tourism Consultative Body of the National Association of Italian Municipalities (ANCI), the Association 'Italy's Most Beautiful Villages' responds to the need to promote the vast heritage of history, art, culture, environment, and traditions present in small Italian centers. The objective is not merely to carry out an integrated tourism promotion operation, but to guarantee -- through protection, recovery, and promotion -- the preservation of a heritage of monuments and memories that would otherwise be irretrievably lost.

Among the initiatives launched by the Association is the National Festival of Italy's Most Beautiful Villages, an annual event that celebrates the rich cultural and historical heritage of the hidden gems of the Italian peninsula. During the Festival, the streets come alive with cultural, gastronomic, and artistic events, allowing visitors to immerse themselves in local traditions and art. The XV edition took place from September 8-10, 2023, in Lucignano.

The XV Edition of Italy's Most Beautiful Villages

"Three days celebrating Italy's most beautiful villages. Lucignano is honored to have hosted this Festival; it was deeply moving for us. Long work, but with exceptional results: extensive participation, especially from municipalities of Italy's most beautiful villages. It was an honor to have so many mayors here. We discussed important themes: combating depopulation, promoting sustainability, especially economic and social, and repopulating our villages." These are the words of Lucignano's mayor Roberta Casini at the conclusion of the Festival, which hosted 150 delegates from municipalities present, 400 administrators and representatives from across Italy.

How to Repopulate Italy's Villages

The editorial team of LaCostaGroup.it also participated in the event, walking through the village and attending various presentations. Among the speakers, many were part of the Association's technical-scientific committee, such as Francesco Maria Spanò, representative of LUISS University, who presented the initiative to repopulate villages through the promotion of programs bringing students, researchers, and workers to work and study in small centers thanks to Smart Working. This initiative stems from phenomena observed and studied during and immediately after the Covid pandemic.

Indeed, many Italians, upon hearing the lockdown announcement, fled major cities to return to small centers of origin. Others did so later, after reopening, when they found themselves facilitated by smart work and began to feel confined within cities.

Following what was stated by Spanò, Annika Patregnani, president of the Biennial Habitat, presented a concrete project she has been carrying forward for several years. It is the I.E.P - International Educational Partners project. Renowned for its unwavering dedication to academic excellence, IEP Italy offers a wide range of intellectually stimulating Foundation programs and Master programs covering an impressive variety of disciplines.

The agreement with the Association Italy's Most Beautiful Villages aims to bring these courses into small centers with specific characteristics, such as good connectivity, spaces to host courses, and accommodations for students from around the world wishing to participate.