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As Storm Marta hits Spain, Portugal and the UK, farmers report "catastrophic crop damage"

Farmers in 'Spain warned that torrential rainfall and high winds caused damage to crops worth millions of euros, and had submerged fields. Spain and Portugal are bracing for more extreme weather.

Storm Marta arrived on Saturday after a series of storms that brought heavy rain, hail, snow, and strong winds to the?Iberian Peninsula? in recent weeks.

Emergency services reported that a snowplow driver was killed on Saturday after his vehicle fell 20 meters (65 feet) down a steep slope at the El Pico Mountain Pass in Avila, northern Spain. It had been heavily snowing, they said.

Emergency services reported that a 46-year old man drowned earlier in the day in a river at Campo Maior in central Portalegre, Portugal. Since the arrival of Storm Leonardo?last week, five people have died.

Nearly 170 roads in Spain have been closed, and rail services in Portugal have been disrupted.

Portugal's Agriculture Ministry said that on Friday, preliminary estimates placed losses in the agricultural sector and forestry at approximately 750 million Euros ($890 millions) due to?the storms which are expected intensify in coming days.

The Spanish weather agency AEMET warned that Storm Marta 'would bring more rain and snow, along with hazardous coastal conditions. Authorities issued a orange weather alert, the second-highest after red.

La Liga announced that the top-flight match between Sevilla vs Girona had been postponed due to bad weather. The request came from the Andalusian team.

Miguel Angel Perez of the COAG farmers' organisation in Andalusia’s Cadiz Province, said to Spanish TVE Saturday: “It rains without stopping. Under water are crops like broccoli, cauliflowers, and carrots. Inundated thousands of hectares. "We have a true natural disaster."

Perez stated that the storm had caused damage of millions of Euros to this year's crops and that farmers would seek assistance from government to recover.

GROUND TREMBLING AND RIVER RAISING

The waterlogging of the past few years has raised concerns about structural changes, including landslides.

Residents in several towns of the Serrania de Ronda mountains in Malaga that were battered this week by Storm Leonardo said Saturday that the ground had trembled for days.

Cortes de la Frontera council said on social media that the tremors were "no threat" and had also been felt by Benaojan Gaucin, Jimera de Libar, all in the vicinity.

The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), which is a group of scientists, has sent specialists to the area in order to monitor the situation.

The dramatic rise in the water level in the province of Cordoba in Andalusia forced the evacuation of several residential areas.

Maria Jesus Montero, the Spanish Deputy Prime minister, warned that it was likely that the river would reach its highest level by Saturday or Sunday.

More than 26,500 emergency workers are on the ground in Portugal to deal with the effects of the storms. Reporting by Graham Keeley and Sergio Gonclaves, Editing by Aidan Lewis; Toby Chopra, Diane Craft, and Toby Chopra

(source: Reuters)