Sunday Tribune

The abandoned Brazil resort town disappeari­ng into the sea

- EUGENIA LOGIURATTO

VULTURES roam the sand in the Brazilian resort town of Atafona amid the ruins of the latest houses destroyed by the sea, whose relentless rise has turned the local coastline into an apocalypti­c landscape.

The Atlantic Ocean advances an average of 6m a year in this small town north of Rio de Janeiro, which has long been prone to extreme erosion – now exacerbate­d by climate change.

The sea has already submerged more than 500 houses, turning the once idyllic coastline into an underwater graveyard of wrecked structures.

One of the next to lose his home will be Joao Waked Peixoto.

Walking through the jumbled rubble of what was once his neighbours’ house, he looks at what is left: a fragment of a blue-painted room strewn with tattered magazines, a bicycle and other remnants of life.

“When will we have to leave? That’s an unknown,” he says.

“The sea advanced 3m or 4m in 15 days. Our wall might not last until next week.”

Waked Peixoto’s grandfathe­r built the house as a vacation home, a beachfront getaway with large rooms and a garden.

During the coronaviru­s pandemic, Waked Peixoto and his family moved in full-time.

But it now looks inevitable the house will be swallowed by the sea.

“It will be a shame to lose this house, because it holds so many memories of my whole family,” he says.

Atafona, a town of about 6 000 people, has long suffered from extreme erosion. It is part of the 4% of coastlines worldwide that lose 5m or more every year.

The problem is being exacerbate­d by global warming, which is causing sea levels to rise and making currents and weather patterns more extreme, says geologist Eduardo Bulhoes of Fluminense Federal University.

But Atafona has had a “chronic problem” for decades, he says.

The Paraiba do Sul river, whose mouth is in Atafona, has shrunk because of mining, agricultur­e and other activities that drain it upstream.

“In the last 40 years, that has drasticall­y reduced the river’s volume, meaning it transports less sand to Atafona,” says Bulhoes.

With less sand, the town’s beaches have stopped regenerati­ng naturally, ceding ground to the sea.

Constructi­on on the coast has only made the problem worse, by stripping away sand dunes and vegetation, the beaches’ natural defences.

The result has been disastrous for the tourism and fishing industries.

“Large boats can’t come through the river delta anymore ... and the money disappeare­d along with them,” says Elialdo Bastos Meirelles, head of a local fishermen’s community of some 600 people.

Local authoritie­s have studied several plans to curb the erosion, including building dikes to reduce the force of the ocean’s waves and hauling sand from the river delta to the beach.

Bulhoes, the geologist, proposed the latter, which is modelled on similar initiative­s in the Netherland­s, Spain and the US.

But the projects exist only on paper so far.

The county under-secretary for the environmen­t, Alex Ramos, told AFP no one had yet come up with a definitive solution, and that any plan would have to gain environmen­tal regulators’ approval first.

In the meantime, the county has launched a social assistance programme that pays 1 200 reais (about R3 400) a month to more than 40 families who lost their homes to erosion.

But critics accuse the local government of a lack of political will.

“We keep hearing promises,” says Veronica Vieira, head of neighbourh­ood associatio­n SOS Atafona.

“But this town has been abandoned. It’s an apocalypse. It makes you want to cry.” |

 ?? ?? BEACHGOERS walk along the shore of Atafona beach, Atafona neighbourh­ood, in Sao Joao da Barra, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. | AFP
BEACHGOERS walk along the shore of Atafona beach, Atafona neighbourh­ood, in Sao Joao da Barra, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. | AFP

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