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The worst floods ever in Brazil

Record flooding in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul caused devastation and affected the local population, displacing more than 600,000 people. Families lost their homes, their possessions, and their livelihoods. According to state authorities, 183 people lost their lives. In total, 2.39 million residents were affected by the floods, which caused significant human and economic losses. The government described the event as the worst climate disaster in the state’s history.

Climate change has doubled the likelihood of flooding, according to a team of international scientists, who added that the heavy rains were also intensified by the natural phenomenon El Niño. Even in the current climate, according to experts from the World Weather Attribution group, the heavy rains were an “extremely rare” event, which should only occur once every 100 to 250 years. But it would have been even rarer without the effects of burning fossil fuels, the group said. Critical infrastructure failure, deforestation, and rapid urbanization contributed to amplifying the effects of the disaster, the scientists added.

Global climate change is expected to render certain areas uninhabitable and cause the migration of hundreds of millions or billions of people by 2050, who will flee rising sea levels, drought, flooding, and other disasters.

Rio Grande do Sul has already suffered several floods in the past, but none comparable to this one. In the streets, residents reflected on the water levels during the last two floods.

About 6,500 family farms were flooded by torrential rains, according to satellite data analysis by consulting firm Terra Analytics. Among them were Edite de Almeida and her husband, João Engelmann.

“We came from nothing. We went back to nothing. Now we’re going to start over,” says Edite de Almeida.