The Borneo Post (Sabah)

After cyclone ruin, back to square one for Mozambique’s Beira

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MAPUTO: Daviz Simango, mayor of Beira on the Mozambican coast, had worked to shore up the city’s climate defences, drawing on World Bank help to build deterrents against rising seas, flooding and storms.

But in just a few hours last month, Cyclone Idai devastated the city of half-a-million people, wiping out his efforts.

Packing winds twice the speed Beira was built to withstand, the superstorm swamped the city’s drainage system, overwhelme­d its floodgates and mocked its brandnew basin, designed to hold storm water.

Nearly 90 per cent of the regionally-vital port city was damaged or destroyed.

“We have never seen this before. Our infrastruc­tures were prepared to handle winds up to 120 kilometres per hour, but this time we were subjected to winds of 240 kph,” the mayor said.

Idai made landfall on March 14, ripping roofs off buildings, pulling down electricit­y pylons, uprooting trees, and bringing heavy rains and floods that swamped an area larger than Luxembourg.

More than 600 people died, as well as nearly 200 in neighbouri­ng Zimbabwe.

Mozambican former first lady Graca Machel, on a post-cyclone visit, declared Beira “will go down in history as having been the first city to be completely devastated by climate change.”

Climate scientists hesitate to attribute a single extreme-weather event to climate change, a longterm meteorolog­ical shift.

But many would agree that Cyclone Idai is entirely consistent with scenarios about the impact on weather systems of global warming – the relentless buildup of heat-trapping greenhouse gases emitted by burning coal, oil, and gas.

A study in the journal Nature last November said average global warming of one degree Celsius to date had boosted the amount of rain that hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones produce, and warned such storms will become wetter and windier in future.

Warmer oceans provide more of the raw fuel on which cyclones feed, and higher sea levels boost storm surges that may overcome coastal defences.

The world’s nations agreed in 2015 to cap the global rise in temperatur­e at 2 degrees Celcius from pre-Industrial Revolution levels.

“We can say with certainty: tropical cyclones will become more intense under global warming. And very strong tropical cyclones will become more frequent,” physics professor Anders Levermann from the University of Potsdam in Germany told AFP.

Cyclones that make landfall in southeast Africa are relatively rare. But Mozambique is vulnerable, with a sub-tropical climate, a nearly 2,500-kilometre shoreline and entrenched poverty that makes it hard to raise funds for climate resilience or emergency response.

Beira, a city with poorly-planned settlement­s, inadequate housing and a fast-expanding population, is particular­ly exposed.

The city has grown rapidly in recent decades, fed by an influx of people fleeing the civil war that ended more than 20 years ago after claiming at least a million lives.

The World Bank ranks Mozambique, after Somalia and Madagascar, as the third-most atrisk country in Africa to climate change, with cyclones and floods among the top threats.

Prior to Idai, Simango had overseen projects funded under a $120-million (106-million euro) credit from the World Bank’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n. The work including rehabilita­ting the water drainage system, upgrading and building 11 kilometres of canals, creating floodgates, and building a large water retention basin.

These projects were supposed to mean “the end of the suffering of a whole population,” Simango said last year. But this was not to be.

Idai “may turn out to be one of the deadliest weather-related disasters to hit the southern hemisphere,” according to World Meterologi­cal Organisati­on (WMO) executive director Petteri Taalas. — AFP

We have never seen this before. Our infrastruc­tures were prepared to handle winds up to 120 kilometres per hour, but this time we were subjected to winds of 240 kph. Daviz Simango, mayor of Beira

 ??  ?? Debris and destroyed buildings which stood in the path of Cyclone Idai are seen in this aerial file photograph over the Praia Nova neighbourh­ood in Beira. — AFP photo
Debris and destroyed buildings which stood in the path of Cyclone Idai are seen in this aerial file photograph over the Praia Nova neighbourh­ood in Beira. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows people waiting to receive aid at a camp for the people displaced in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai in John Segredo near Beira, Mozambique. — Reuters photo
File photo shows people waiting to receive aid at a camp for the people displaced in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai in John Segredo near Beira, Mozambique. — Reuters photo

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