Fishermen haul in their fishing nets at Hortobágyi fish lake. Due to droughts in recent years, water levels in the lakes have been steadily declining, and although water has been replenished from the nearby Tisza river, it is unclear how sustainable this situation will be in the future. In the summer drought, water levels in the Tisza also fell to record lows.
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We'll stay even after this land dried out - stories from the Hungarian Great Plain after the historical summer drought (detail)

The Hungarian Great Plain is the country's largest landscape, main source of food production. And most vulnerable to the climate change. Farming is a source of livelihood for the people here. Changing climatic conditions are having an increasing impact on their lives. According to climate forecasts, till 2100, 2/3 of Hungary's territory become semi-desert and making it unsuitable for farming.
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Zsolt Balázs

freelance photographer
As an independent photographer his most important angle is that of humanity and objectivity. Several years he has been working on exploring the effects of global climate change in the Great Plain (Hungary) on the environment and he focuses on individuals who are already suffering from the consequences or are threatened in their existence.