Houston Chronicle Sunday

Flooding forecast to worsen in Brazil, where many who remain are poor

- By Mauricio Savarese and Eléonore Hughes

ELDORADO DO SUL, Brazil — More rain started coming down on Saturday in Brazil’s already flooded Rio Grande do Sul state, where many of those remaining are poor people with limited ability to move to less dangerous areas.

Six inches of rain could fall over the weekend and will probably worsen flooding, according to the Friday afternoon bulletin from Brazil’s national meteorolog­y institute. It said there is also a high likelihood that winds will intensify and water levels rise in the Patos lagoon next to the state capital, Porto Alegre, and the surroundin­g area.

As of Saturday afternoon, heavy rains were falling in the northern and central regions of the state, and water levels were rising.

Carlos Sampaio, 62, lives in a low-income community next to soccer club Gremio’s stadium in Porto Alegre. His two-story home doubles as a sports bar.

Even though the first floor is inundated, he said he won’t leave, partly out of fear of looters in his high-crime neighborho­od, where police carry assault rifles as they patrol its flooded streets. But Sampaio also has nowhere else to go, he told The Associated Press.

“I am analyzing how safe I am, and I know that my belongings aren’t safe at all,” Sampaio said. “As long as I can fight for what is mine, within my abilities to not leave myself exposed, I will fight.”

At least 136 people have died in the floods since they began last week, and 125 more are missing, local authoritie­s said Friday. The number of people displaced from their homes because of the torrential rains has surpassed 400,000, of whom 70,000 are sheltering in gyms, schools and other temporary locations.

“I came here on Monday — lost my apartment to the flood,” Matheus Vicari, a 32-year-old Uber driver, said inside a shelter where he is staying with his young son. “I don’t spent a lot of time here. I try to be out to think about something else.”

Some residents of Rio Grande do Sul state have found sanctuary at second homes, including Alexandra Zanela, who co-owns a content agency in Porto Alegre.

Zanela and her partner volunteere­d when the floods began, but chose to move out after frequent electricit­y and water cuts. She headed to the beachfront city of Capao da Canoa — so far unaffected by flooding — where her partner’s family owns a summer home.

“We took a ride with my sister-in-law, took our two cats, my mother and a friend of hers and came here safely. We left the Porto Alegre chaos,” Zanela, 42, told the AP by phone. “It is very clear that those who have the privilege to leave are in a much safer position, and those living in the poorer areas of Porto Alegre have no option.”

Weather across South America is affected by the El Niño climate phenomenon, a naturally occurring event that periodical­ly warms surface waters in the equatorial Pacific. In Brazil, El Niño has historical­ly caused droughts in the north and intense rainfall in the south, and this year the effects have been particular­ly severe.

Scientists say extreme weather is happening more frequently because of climate change, caused by the burning of fossil fuels that emit planetwarm­ing greenhouse gas emissions, and overwhelmi­ngly agree the world needs to drasticall­y cut the burning of coal, oil and gas to limit global warming.

But there is also a need for social policy responses, said Natalie Unterstell, president of Talanoa Institute, a Rio de Janeirobas­ed climate policy think tank.

“Providing an effective response to climate change in Brazil requires us to combat inequaliti­es,” Unterstell said.

In Brazil, the poor often live in houses built from less resilient materials such as wood and in unregulate­d areas more vulnerable to damage from extreme weather, such as low-lying areas or on steep hillsides.

“We cannot say that the worst is over,” Rio Grande do Sul Gov. Eduardo Leite said on social media Friday. The day before, he estimated that $3.7 billion will be needed to rebuild the state.

The scale of devastatio­n may be most comparable to Hurricane Katrina, which hit New Orleans in 2005, Sergio Vale, chief economist at MB Associates, wrote in a note Friday.

Rio Grande do Sul has the sixth-highest gross domestic product per capita among Brazil’s 26 states and the federal district, according to the national statistics institute. Many of the state’s inhabitant­s descend from Italian and German immigrants.

“In the popular imaginatio­n, the population of Rio Grande do Sul is seen as white and well-off, but this is not the reality,” said Marília Closs, a researcher at the CIPO Platform, a climate think tank. “It’s very important to dispel this fiction, because it’s constructe­d with a political objective” to erase Black and poor residents, she said.

 ?? Andre Penner/Associated Press ?? Vehicles are partially submerged Saturday on a flooded street in Sao Leopoldo in Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul state, where more rains threaten to worsen the flooding.
Andre Penner/Associated Press Vehicles are partially submerged Saturday on a flooded street in Sao Leopoldo in Brazil’s Rio Grande do Sul state, where more rains threaten to worsen the flooding.

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