Southern Brazil has been hit by the worst floods in more than 80 years. At least 39 people have died
SAO PAULO (AP) — Heavy rains within the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul killed 39 individuals, with one other 68 nonetheless lacking, the state civil protection company mentioned Friday, as record-breaking floods devastated cities and compelled hundreds to depart their houses.
It was the fourth such environmental catastrophe in a 12 months, following floods in July, September and November 2023 that killed 75 individuals in whole.
The flooding statewide has surpassed that seen throughout a historic 1941 deluge, in accordance with the Brazilian Geological Service. In some cities, water ranges had been at their highest since data started almost 150 years in the past, the company mentioned.
On Thursday, a dam at a hydroelectric plant between the cities of Bento Goncalves and Cotipora partially collapsed and whole cities within the Taquari River valley, like Lajeado and Estrela, had been utterly overtaken by water. Within the city of Feliz, 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the state capital, Porto Alegre, a massively swollen river swept away a bridge that linked it with the neighboring metropolis of Linha Nova.
Operators reported electrical energy, communications and water cuts throughout the state. Greater than 24,000 individuals needed to go away their houses, in accordance with the civil protection company.
With out web, phone service or electrical energy, residents struggled to offer updates or data to their relations residing in different states. Helicopters flew regularly over the cities whereas stranded households with kids awaited rescue on the rooftops.
Isolete Neumann, 58, lives within the metropolis of Lajeado within the Taquari River valley and informed The Related Press she has by no means earlier than seen a state of affairs just like the one she is now experiencing.
“Folks had been making barricades in entrance of hospitals with sand and gravel. It felt like a horror film,” she mentioned by cellphone. Some individuals in her area had been so determined, she added, that they threw themselves into the water currents.
Neumann’s personal neighborhood wasn’t inundated, however has no working water and he or she hasn’t showered since Tuesday. She mentioned she’s amassing rainwater in a basin to have the ability to cook dinner. A clothes retailer she owns within the metropolis’s central space is flooded, she added.
“I don’t even know the way it have to be. There have to be nothing left.”
The downpour began Monday and is anticipated to final at the very least by Saturday, Marcelo Seluchi, chief meteorologist on the Nationwide Heart for Monitoring and Alerts of Pure Disasters, informed Brazil’s public tv community Friday.
On Thursday night time, Gov. Eduardo Leite alerted the state’s inhabitants — often known as gauchos — concerning the persistence of rains and floods. The scenario was anticipated to worsen in Porto Alegre, he mentioned.
“As a human being, I’m devastated inside, similar to each gaucho is,” he mentioned. “However as governor, I’m right here steadfast and I assure that we’ll not falter. We’re doing all the things with focus, consideration, self-discipline, and outrage, to make sure that all the things inside our attain is completed.”
President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva acknowledged the flood victims at a press convention on Friday alongside Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in Brasilia.
“The primary phrases from Minister Fumio Kishida within the assembly we held had been of solidarity with the individuals of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, who’re victims by one of many largest floods we’ve got ever identified. By no means earlier than within the historical past of Brazil had there been such a amount of rain in a single single location,” Lula mentioned.
Climate throughout South America is affected by the local weather phenomenon El Niño, a periodic, naturally occurring occasion that warms floor waters within the Equatorial Pacific area. In Brazil, El Niño has traditionally brought about droughts within the north and intense rainfall within the south.
This 12 months, the impacts of El Niño have been significantly dramatic, with a historic drought within the Amazon. Scientists say excessive climate is occurring extra continuously as a consequence of human-caused local weather change.
Karina Lima, a 36-year-old scientist and PhD candidate in climatology on the Federal College of Rio Grande do Sul, informed The Related Press that the state is situated in a area with sure traits that amplify El Niño’s harmful potential.
“Fashions have lengthy predicted that Rio Grande do Sul will proceed to see a rise in common annual precipitation and excessive precipitation, which means extra concentrated and extreme rainfall,” she mentioned.