
Still reeling a year on, Porto Alegre fears flood
Lucía Lacurcia,
Agence France-Presse
Armed with brushes and paint, volunteers touch up houses left standing after devastating floods last year that killed nearly 200 people and displaced half a million in the Brazilian city of Porto Alegre. As residents continue to repair damage nearly 12 months after Rio Grande do Sul's worst-ever natural calamity, they worry not enough is being done to buttress the city against another such catastrophe, which experts say is made ever more likely by climate change.
In late April and early May 2024, three months' worth of rain fell on the wealthy state, of which Porto Alegre is the capital, in just 10 days.
The brunt of the deluge was felt in the city of 1.3 million people located on the shores of Lake Guaiba, which is fed by four rivers. Scientists of the World Weather Attribution later concluded climate change had doubled the likelihood of the 'extremely rare event' — the kind expected to occur only once every 100 to 250 years. With recovery work still underway, another storm hit the city last month — less severe this time, but again flooding roads, felling trees and knocking out power. 'Nowadays, the rain brings fear and insecurity,' said Jotape Pax, a Porto Alegre resident and urban artist behind the volunteer restoration project.
When last year's mega-storm hit, Porto Alegre was reliant on a faulty barrier of walls and dikes that had been designed in the 1960s. Due to poor maintenance, the walls were cracked and the gates were held up with sand bags, according to Mima Feltrin, a flood specialist at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.
Of the 23 water drainage pumps, 19 failed during the floods, she told AFP.
A year later, only two have been fixed. 'It's very worrying because, so far, what we've seen are mostly emergency measures,' said Feltrin, pointing to 'a major gap' in infrastructure reinforcement.
The UN Environment Programme says developing countries will need as much as $387 billion per year by 2030 for projects to adapt to unavoidable climate change, including building sea walls and planting drought resistant crops. In 2020, only $28 billion had been forthcoming. Last year, a report by the Climate Policy Initiative, a research NGO, found Brazil was spending about $2.7 billion per year to prepare for worsening floods and droughts — not nearly enough, according to experts.
The Institute of Hydraulic Research at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul concluded in a study last December that many deaths in Porto Alegre could have been prevented with an early alert and evacuation system. In a multi-million dollar lawsuit, the municipality stands accused of 'omissions' that led to flood protection system failures, according to the prosecutor's office.
Mayor Sebastiao Melo said a climate action plan will be presented to the municipal legislature this year, with provision for an early warning system.
The plan also envisions work to reinforce existing dikes and build new ones, the mayor told AFP, while urban drainage systems are already being upgraded.
Feltrin said Porto Alegre needs to completely renew its flood containment system, possibly by looking at solutions applied in other low-lying areas such as New York and the Netherlands. 'It is important to have flood gates, but also parks designed to absorb water,' she said.
At Porto Alegre's central market, a plaque recalls the flooding that had completely submerged the historic building. It is bustling once again, and with changes such as furniture made of water-resistant stainless steel rather than wood. 'With climate change, this is going to happen more and more often. It scares us a lot, but we are working to be better prepared,' said Nadja Melo, 45, who runs a market eatery.
For others, it has been tougher to bounce back.
In one of Porto Alegre's hardest-hit neighborhoods, Sarandi, dozens of families have been ordered to leave or risk having their homes flooded again in a high-risk zone.
'It is very difficult to start over,' said Claudir Poli, a 42-year-old with two prosthetic legs, a wife and three children, complaining that aid funding is not enough to rehouse his family. AFP is publishing this story to coincide with Covering Climate Now's 89 Percent Project, which aims to highlight that the majority of people in the world want to see stronger climate action.
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