Why is the water of Venice's Grand Canal green?

Surprising images
Experts and authorities at work
A small patch
The possible causes
Environmental groups deny responsibility
Not an act of protest
If it's not a stunt, then what is?
What is this color due to?
It's not confirmed yet
Could it be fluorescein?
How much fluorescein is usually used?
How much could have been used in Venice?
Could a kilo be too much for an accident?
Is there a health hazard?
The authorities are calling for calm
It already happened in 1968
A a mistake or a deliberate action?
Surprising images

It is an unusual and "coloured" Venice that tourists and Venetians found themselves facing on Sunday May 28th, when the waters of the Grand Canal appeared to be an intense fluorescent green.

Experts and authorities at work

The alarm went off shortly after 8.30 in the morning. Experts and authorities mobilized immediately, the to figure out what was going and if somebody was up pulling a prank of some kind.

Photo: Twitter @arpaveneto

A small patch

It all started as a small fluorescent spot near the Rialto Bridge which, according to the news reported by the Italian media outlet Corriere della Sera, did not take long to increase to even more significant dimensions, until green water had invaded the Grand Canal, the major waterway in Venice.

The possible causes

At first, there were various hypotheses on the table, including those said it could be a protest of sorts by environmental groups. Nevertheless...

Environmental groups deny responsibility

Various environmental groups, including 'Ultima Generazione', and Extinction Rebellion, have denied being responsible for this action, issuing statements and press releases about it to various news agencies, including LaPresse.

Not an act of protest

When environmental groups commit such actions as they did on May 21 in Rome, by pouring coal into the waters of the Trevi Fountain (pictured), they are quick to own up to it.

If it's not a stunt, then what is?

Since it does not appear to be a stunt or protest, a fact which is also mentioned in the analysis by IlSole24ore, therefore leads to discarding an environmental protest of sorts as the origin of this phenomenon. Make it necessary for authorities to look elsewhere for the reason behind Venice's green water, which has so far been decidedly unclear.

What is this color due to?

What, according to the first findings, would seem clear, however, could be the type of liquid used: a tracer, "that is, a liquid that is introduced in all those circumstances where there is a loss of water to understand the path followed",  explained the State Police in a press release.

It's not confirmed yet

Samples were taken from the waters of Venice which are still being analyzed and which will confirm (or deny) the first assumptions about the nature of the substance that gave rise to the phenomenon.

Could it be fluorescein?

According to the first opinions released, it would seem that it could be a substance called fluorescein, a chemical compound with multiple areas of use, thanks, in fact, to its peculiar fluorescent color (in this case green).

In the photo, the redemption of the Gemini IV spacecraft in 1965, facilitated by the release of a green trail.

How much fluorescein is usually used?

The words of Maurizio Vesco of ARPA (Regional Agency for Environmental Protection) to Repubblica, however, underline an interesting fact: in the most common operations, those of prospecting with fluorescein of underground watercourses or discharges, only a spoonful of fluorescein is usually used.

Photo: Benjah-bmm27, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

How much could have been used in Venice?

According to Maurizio Vesco, to dye an area of 500 meters green as happened in Venice "a kilo would have been used".

Could a kilo be too much for an accident?

In the meantime, the investigations of the local police continue, who would be reviewing the local video camera footage to exclude or confirm the hypothesis of the accident and, if necessary, trace the perpetrator of the act.

Photo: Facebook Luca Zaia, President of the Veneto Region

Is there a health hazard?

However, the experts and the authorities have provided an answer to the first and perhaps most important question on the table: that of health.

The authorities are calling for calm

With an official statement, both the State Police and the municipal and regional authorities confirmed that there is no danger to humans or animals, calling for the public to remain calm.

Photo: Instagram @zaiaufficiale

It already happened in 1968

After all, a similar thing had already happened in 1968 when an Argentine artist Nicolás García Uriburo, during the Venice Biennale, created a stir by dyeing the city's waters green, as a protest against pollution.

A a mistake or a deliberate action?

In any case, whatever the cause of this action that has colored Venice, be it an accident, a hoax or a deliberate action, we are sure of one thing: these will be more photos to add to the annals of a city which, over the centuries, it has truly seen everything. Even twice.

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