Times-Herald

In Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, rivers rise to record levels

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MANAUS, Brazil (AP) — Rivers around the biggest city in Brazil's Amazon rainforest have swelled to levels unseen in over a century of record-keeping, according to data published Tuesday by Manaus' port authoritie­s, straining a society that has grown weary of increasing­ly frequent flooding.

The Rio Negro was at its highest level since records began in 1902, with a depth of 29.98 meters (98 feet) at the port's measuring station. The nearby Solimoes and Amazon rivers were also nearing all-time highs, flooding streets and houses in dozens of municipali­ties and affecting some 450,000 people in the region.

Higher-than-usual precipitat­ion is associated with the La Nina phenomenon, when currents in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean affect global climate patterns. Environmen­tal experts and organizati­ons including the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion say there is strong evidence that human activity and global warming are altering the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, including La Nina.

Seven of the 10 biggest floods in the Amazon basin have occurred in the past 13 years, data from Brazil's state-owned Geological Survey shows.

"If we continue to destroy the Amazon the way we do, the climatic anomalies will become more and more accentuate­d," said Virgílio Viana, director of the

Sustainabl­e Amazon Foundation, a nonprofit. " Greater floods on the one hand, greater droughts on the other."

Large swaths of Brazil are currently drying up in a severe drought, with a possible shortfall in power generation from the nation's hydroelect­ric plants and increased electricit­y prices, government authoritie­s have warned.

But in Manaus, 66-year-old Julia Simas has water ankle-deep in her home. Simas has lived in the working-class neighborho­od of Sao Jorge since 1974 and is used to seeing the river rise and fall with the seasons. Simas likes her neighborho­od because it is safe and clean. But the quickening pace of the floods in the last decade has her worried.

"From 1974 until recently, many years passed and we wouldn't see any water. It was a normal place," she said.

When the river does overflow its banks and flood her street, she and other residents use boards and beams to build rudimentar­y scaffoldin­g within their homes to raise their floors above the water.

"I think human beings have contribute­d a lot (to this situation," she said. "Nature doesn't forgive. She comes and doesn't want to know whether you're ready to face her or not."

Flooding also has a significan­t impact on local industries such as farming and cattle ranching. Many family-run operations have seen their production vanish under water. Others have been unable to reach their shops, offices and market stalls or clients.

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