Drought in the South of Brazil Leaves 52 Cities Without Water

So far, 397 municipalities in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, in southern Brazil, have decreed a state of emergency in consequence of the drought that is affecting the region.

This is one of the worst droughts on record in the region. Besides losing their crops, farmers are without water for household use. Corn producers suffered the greatest damage.


At least 70% of what they planted won’t be harvested. Soybeans are second on the list, with losses amounting to 45%.


The president of the Rio Grande do Sul Federation of Agricultural Workers (Fetag-RG), Ezí­dio Vanelli Pinheiro, informed that 52 of the municipalities that have decreed a state of emergency lack drinking water. “The situation is very grave all over the state,” he said.


Drought hits parts of Brazil’s southern and northeastern regions


Meanwhile, in Brazil’s northeastern region, several municipalities in the state of Pernambuco’s semi-arid region are also considered to be critical because of drought.


According to João Amorim, who administers a cistern-building program (Programa Um milhão de Cisternas) for an umbrella group (Articulação no Semi-írido Brasileiro) (ASA), that provides assistance in the semi-arid region, there have been isolated rain showers in the area but not enough to improve the situation.


ASA, which congregates some 800 organizations that operate in the Brazilian northeast region and the northern part of the state of Minas Gerais, is working to mobilize families and organizations in the struggle to deal with the effects of the current drought.


Amorim explains that the cistern-building program seeks to provide each family in the region with a reservoir of 16,000 liters of water which should be sufficient to get them through eight months of drought.


“Last year we had four times as much rain as we expected. Unfortunately it came in a short period of time so we did not have sufficient storage space,” he says.


Since July 2003, with assistance from the Ministry of Social Development and Hunger Combat and a budget of some US$26 million (R$70 million), ASA has been able to build 60,000 cisterns. The target for 2005 is to build an additional 50,000 cisterns.


ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Gunmen in Brazil Trap Indians Cutting Off Their Water and Food

Brazilian gunmen hired by ranchers have been holding as prisoners a large group of ...

Brazil’s Industry Leaders Want to Bypass Mercosur and Sign EU Accord

A group of businessmen belonging to Brazil's powerful National Confederation of Industry, CNI, said ...

What Brazil Has to Teach the U.S. on Oil and Biofuel

The Brazilian ambassador to the United States, Roberto Abdenur, affirmed Monday, October 10, in ...

Brazil Is Falling Behind, But We Keep Talking About Our Progress

The end of the Second World War gave rise to the creation of several ...

Brazil’s Lula Orders 5% Growth, But Doubting Thomases Abound

Brazil’s economy grew 3.2% in the third quarter from a year earlier, compared with ...

Book Says Brazil’s Lula Told Kirchner to Fuck Off. Ambassador Calls It Fantasy

Brazilian ambassador in Chile described as mere "fantasy" alleged statements by President Lula da ...

US Sends Trade Representative Schwab to Brazil to Revive Doha Talks

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab will be in Brazil from July 27 to ...

Brazil Hires French Firm to Clean Its Gas

Petrobras informs that it hired the French firm, Axens (of the French Petroleum Institute ...

Lack of Skills Makes 60% of Brazilians Unemployable

Brazil’s Ministry of Labor says that one of the country’s serious development bottlenecks is ...

Brazil’s Carlinhos Antunes Cooks Smorgasbord of Arab, Jewish and Gypsy Sounds

The song is "Lamentos", written by famous Brazilian singer Pixinguinha, but the rhythm coming ...