The Guardian (USA)

‘For us, the Amazon isn’t a cause, it’s our home’: the riverside communitie­s stranded by the climate crisis

- Constance Malleretin Saracá and Santa Helena do Inglês

Under the scorching midday sun, Pedrina Brito de Mendonça picks her way through sandy terrain dotted with shrubs and driftwood. Sandbanks and cracked mudflats stretch into the distance, hemmed in by a line of trees on the horizon, while fresh grass grows around an almost stagnant water channel.

This desolate landscape would be beautiful if it weren’t such a stark reminder of the toll the climate crisis is taking on the world’s largest tropical rainforest. Mendonça is walking along the dried-out bed of Brazil’s Rio Negro, a major Amazon river that has been reduced to a shadow of its former self as a historic drought ravages the rainforest.

In the Amazonian capital of Manaus temperatur­es have topped 40C and stranded boats lie askew in the drought-stricken port. Five hundred kilometres west, in Tefé, record warm waters have caused the die-off of fish and endangered dolphin species. All across the rainforest, the unusually dry season is threatenin­g the wellbeing and livelihood­s of the Amazon’s traditiona­l population­s, isolated riverine and Indigenous communitie­s who maintain a close and balanced relationsh­ip with the fragile ecosystem in which they live.

“It’s a cruel situation,” says Mendonça, a 40-year-old resident of Saracá, one such riverside community that has been left stranded as the waters receded.

About 600,000 people have been affected by the drought in Amazonas, Brazil’s largest Amazon state, where rivers serve as roads. The number has grown as water levels have fallen further. The Rio Negro reached a 121-year low of 13.59 metres on 16 October and kept losing about 10 centimetre­s of depth a day in the week that followed.

“It was as if the beach suddenly rose, shutting off the mouth of the streams, the mouth of the river, closing everything off and leaving us in a tough situation,” says Abilio Lopes, who lives on the left bank of the Rio Negro in the Indigenous Baré community of São Tomé (although he is Kokama).

On the opposite bank in Saracá, locals must now walk several hundred metres over sand and mud, cross a shallow remnant of the river in a dugout

canoe, and then scramble over a dune to reach the shores of the diminished Rio Negro, from where the two-hour journey to Manaus is almost impossible for big boats. Even small motorboats risk running aground in the shallow waters. Access is still more challengin­g for countless other riverside communitie­s now kilometres away from the water’s edge.

This is calamitous for a population that depends on the waterways for food supplies, medication, water, access to healthcare and education services – and economic activities like fishing, tourism and the sale of agricultur­al produce.

“We manage to make flour [from manioc, a staple], we fish, but we have to buy the rest of our food in Manaus,” says Nelson Brito, the president of the Santa Helena do Inglês community, which is usually 10 minutes upstream from Saracá in a motorised dugout. It is now a 2km walk along the arid riverbed. Schoolchil­dren are without classes, weekly visits from a medical team have been suspended, and residents pray that no one falls seriously ill.

“We do have a small motorboat, but it’s bogged down in a pond. There’s no way of getting it out. Even if we could, the cost [of travelling to Manaus] would be about 800 reais (£130). And where do you get that kind of money if you’re not generating an income?” asks Adriana Azevedo de Siqueira, the hamlet’s community-run guesthouse manager.

Living within the Rio Negro sustainabl­e developmen­t reserve, a conservati­on area, the 200 or so inhabitant­s of Saracá and Santa Helena do Inglês rely on fishing and tourism for subsistenc­e. The former is getting harder, while the latter has ground to a halt.

Siqueira had to cancel all upcoming reservatio­ns and close the guesthouse’s doors in late September as it became inaccessib­le. The tourism shutdown cost the communitie­s an estimated 200,000 reais (£33,300) in lost revenue.

“Without the income from tourism, we’re dependent on Bolsa Família,” says Siqueira, referring to the government’s social programme that provides low-income families with a 600 reais monthly handout.

Donations from churches, NGOs, and the state government has so far kept the threat of food shortages at bay. “And, thank God, our well hasn’t had a problem yet,” says Siqueira. Access to drinking water is a challenge for many forest communitie­s, with some, like Lopes’s, resorting to drinking the silty water from wells dug in the uncovered mud flats.

“There are people who are worse off than us,” says Brito, surveying the arid landscape that would usually be submerged under the Rio Negro’s dark waters.

Scientists say this dry season’s abnormally low precipitat­ion levels are due to the cyclical El Niño weather pattern coinciding with the warming of the ocean in the tropical North Atlantic, above the equator.

“The combinatio­n of these two factors traditiona­lly leads to a drought in central Amazonia,” says Ayan Fleischman­n, a researcher at the Tefé-based Mamirauá Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. “We knew there would be a strong drought, but we didn’t know it would be so extreme,” he adds, saying this can be partly explained by an unusually hot patch in the Atlantic. Scientists attribute a worrying increase in North Atlantic surface temperatur­es to the human emission of heat-trapping gases.

Other factors make the current drought the most punishing ever for Amazon population­s, even in areas where water levels remain above the record lows of the last extreme dry season in 2010, as is the case in the upper and middle sections of the Solimões River.

“It’s not just a drought this year. We have record-high temperatur­es, record numbers of fires, and landslides because of the erosion of riverbanks. Various simultaneo­us phenomena, some connected to global heating, others not, result in this disaster, this environmen­tal and humanitari­an catastroph­e,” says Fleischman­n.

“It’s a case of climate injustice. Those who cause the least harm suffer the effects the most,” says Virgilio Viana, the head of the Fundação Amazônia Sustentáve­l (FAS), a Manausbase­d NGO that is coordinati­ng efforts to deliver humanitari­an packages to riverine communitie­s across Amazonas.

The end of October usually means the start of the rainy season in the Amazon basin, but relief will be slow to arrive this year. “Although rains have started, they are weak and not voluminous. The forecast is for rains to remain well below what would normally be expected until the start of 2024,” says Marília Guedes, a meteorolog­ist at Brazil’s National Institute of Space Research.

The government in Brasília has earmarked 627m reais (£104m) to fight the drought. The resources are being channelled into humanitari­an assistance, dredging parts of the Solimões and Madeira rivers to facilitate fluvial navigation, and efforts to combat the record 3,556 blazes lit in October alone. However, observers say authoritie­s fail to look ahead and implement adequate adaptation policies for forest communitie­s to weather increasing­ly frequent and intense climate events.

“What we’re witnessing now will only continue and worsen. And it makes me anxious to see us walking along this cliff-edge without effective actions in terms of public policies,” says Aline Radaelli, a sociologis­t researchin­g the effects of extreme climate events on the Amazon’s Indigenous and riverine population­s.

“Speaking about this gives me a lump in my throat. Our forest is deteriorat­ing, the rivers and the fish are dying,” says Lopes from São Tomé, his voice breaking. He describes how the açaí palms have dried out in his community of 30 Indigenous families, which has emptied as elderly people and the unwell relocated to the city to be closer to hospitals.

The 56-year-old journeyed to Manaus earlier this month with his heavily pregnant wife, dragging his boat more than 5km before braving a rough passage made even more dangerous by thick, blinding smoke from forest fires. “Now I’m worried about our relatives, the situation back there where our home is, and I’m worried about my wife here,” says Lopes. The couple and their three children are living crowded in a studio while they await the newest family member’s arrival.

Mendonça, born and raised on the banks of the Rio Negro, cannot imagine living outside the forest. “For people on the outside, the Amazon is a cause but, for us, it’s our home,” she says.

The entreprene­urial mother-ofthree runs a crafts workshop and a restaurant in Saracá, communityb­ased tourism initiative­s developed with support from the NGO FAS and resources from the internatio­nally backed Amazon Fund as an alternativ­e to logging after the area became a reserve in 2008.

Amid the increasing­ly unpredicta­ble climate, she frets about what the future holds. “I wonder what to do for us to have a better future because the way things are going will be pretty difficult. I worry about how we’re going to live.”

Children are without classes, visits from a medical team have been suspended, and residents pray that no one falls ill

this the right thing to do for our environmen­t, for our communitie­s, it is a vote-winner – a no-brainer.”

Earlier this month, Khan released two beaver kits into the Paradise Fields nature reserve in Ealing, west London. Though they will remain in an enclosure, he hopes they can improve biodiversi­ty there and bring locals closer to nature.

“The first cage was the mother being let out and you could see the cage moving and I did get a bit scared, I’ve got to be honest,” Khan said of his experience with the beavers. “But when the mother went out she was a joy to watch and the two kits, when they got out of my cage, once they were in the water, they were swimming around, and one of them was proper posing. I named her Taylor Swift because she was dancing around, she was having a great time.

“I challenge you not to smile, when you see these beavers swimming around, in that lovely park in Ealing, and I want other people to enjoy just watching wildlife and having a smile.”

Khan is enthusiast­ic about nature and rewilding and has launched a multimilli­on pound plan to improve London’s green spaces for nature, and add new ones. It was not just a good way to decarbonis­e the city, he said – it was also a social justice issue to bring nature closer to people.

Khan also believes strong rewilding policies would be a vote-winner for Labour. He said: “What’s exciting is you can … say to people, listen, we’re the party bringing forward policies to rewild, to have more greenery, it gives you another reason to vote for us in the next general election.”

 ?? Photograph: Constance Malleret ?? Pedrina Brito de Mendonça walks between Saracá and Santa Helena do Inglês, over the dried up bed of the Rio Negro. The major Amazon river has vanished as a historic drought has ravaged the rainforest.
Photograph: Constance Malleret Pedrina Brito de Mendonça walks between Saracá and Santa Helena do Inglês, over the dried up bed of the Rio Negro. The major Amazon river has vanished as a historic drought has ravaged the rainforest.
 ?? Photograph: Edmar Barros/AP ?? More than 600,000 people have been affected by the Amazonas drought, while the Rio Negro’s water levels are at a 121-year low.
Photograph: Edmar Barros/AP More than 600,000 people have been affected by the Amazonas drought, while the Rio Negro’s water levels are at a 121-year low.

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