Dubai Telegraph - The Brazil resort town disappearing into the sea

EUR -
AED 3.825166
AFN 77.59776
ALL 98.727579
AMD 415.358832
ANG 1.87688
AOA 952.377919
ARS 1089.57788
AUD 1.661576
AWG 1.874552
AZN 1.770012
BAM 1.967338
BBD 2.102822
BDT 126.793596
BGN 1.954426
BHD 0.392559
BIF 3035.732071
BMD 1.041418
BND 1.416587
BOB 7.196099
BRL 6.273187
BSD 1.041392
BTN 90.135311
BWP 14.494658
BYN 3.408138
BYR 20411.783391
BZD 2.091938
CAD 1.492638
CDF 2952.418741
CHF 0.94368
CLF 0.03789
CLP 1045.510397
CNY 7.572615
CNH 7.578624
COP 4488.978149
CRC 523.160604
CUC 1.041418
CUP 27.597564
CVE 112.082564
CZK 25.13649
DJF 185.080482
DKK 7.460923
DOP 63.995336
DZD 140.893547
EGP 52.374367
ERN 15.621263
ETB 131.270368
FJD 2.410777
FKP 0.857698
GBP 0.843813
GEL 2.967922
GGP 0.857698
GHS 15.673544
GIP 0.857698
GMD 75.506125
GNF 9015.551032
GTQ 8.037018
GYD 217.884673
HKD 8.108113
HNL 26.566227
HRK 7.685191
HTG 135.94531
HUF 411.771241
IDR 17021.969364
ILS 3.707477
IMP 0.857698
INR 90.032992
IQD 1364.256951
IRR 43830.657476
ISK 145.99659
JEP 0.857698
JMD 164.142634
JOD 0.738781
JPY 162.016418
KES 134.908664
KGS 91.072283
KHR 4196.91283
KMF 498.994908
KPW 937.275884
KRW 1495.090102
KWD 0.320975
KYD 0.867877
KZT 545.682361
LAK 22713.315717
LBP 93245.904577
LKR 309.716369
LRD 197.869533
LSL 19.526471
LTL 3.075036
LVL 0.629943
LYD 5.129001
MAD 10.434829
MDL 19.506115
MGA 4902.475089
MKD 61.563229
MMK 3382.483482
MNT 3538.736845
MOP 8.352766
MRU 41.500342
MUR 48.456697
MVR 16.043031
MWK 1806.859335
MXN 21.504933
MYR 4.660328
MZN 66.553861
NAD 19.526778
NGN 1619.404027
NIO 38.205461
NOK 11.773496
NPR 144.216699
NZD 1.838271
OMR 0.400868
PAB 1.041392
PEN 3.884742
PGK 4.141676
PHP 61.045293
PKR 290.243415
PLN 4.252993
PYG 8255.295281
QAR 3.791284
RON 4.979325
RSD 117.225054
RUB 103.635484
RWF 1447.570353
SAR 3.906791
SBD 8.818732
SCR 15.7534
SDG 625.891882
SEK 11.442056
SGD 1.410631
SHP 0.857698
SLE 23.692609
SLL 21838.004602
SOS 595.16289
SRD 36.558956
STD 21555.24005
SVC 9.112397
SYP 13540.510579
SZL 19.396461
THB 35.395734
TJS 11.351609
TMT 3.644961
TND 3.31223
TOP 2.439103
TRY 37.119172
TTD 7.072375
TWD 34.00176
TZS 2625.056344
UAH 43.88365
UGX 3827.428042
USD 1.041418
UYU 45.788532
UZS 13533.220487
VES 57.51819
VND 26316.62073
VUV 123.639179
WST 2.91683
XAF 659.817074
XAG 0.03382
XAU 0.000379
XCD 2.814482
XDR 0.802394
XOF 657.134214
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.312916
ZAR 19.272504
ZMK 9374.010115
ZMW 28.977525
ZWL 335.336017
  • BCC

    1.1500

    129.12

    +0.89%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.8

    +0.85%

  • NGG

    2.0600

    61.59

    +3.34%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    23.39

    +1.03%

  • CMSC

    0.3000

    23.55

    +1.27%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    33.78

    +1.04%

  • CMSD

    0.4100

    24

    +1.71%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    67.96

    +2%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    61.73

    +1.02%

  • BTI

    0.4300

    36.73

    +1.17%

  • JRI

    0.1900

    12.57

    +1.51%

  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    62.2

    +0.32%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.27

    +2.06%

  • RELX

    1.3800

    49.55

    +2.79%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    8.55

    +0.82%

  • BP

    -0.1700

    31.52

    -0.54%

The Brazil resort town disappearing into the sea
The Brazil resort town disappearing into the sea

The Brazil resort town disappearing into the sea

Vultures roam the sand in the Brazilian resort town of Atafona amid the ruins of the latest houses destroyed by the sea, whose relentless rise has turned the local coastline into an apocalyptic landscape.

Text size:

The Atlantic Ocean advances an average of six meters (nearly 20 feet) a year in this small town north of Rio de Janeiro, which has long been prone to extreme erosion -- now exacerbated by climate change.

The sea has already submerged more than 500 houses, turning the once idyllic coastline into an underwater graveyard of wrecked structures.

One of the next to lose his home will be Joao Waked Peixoto.

Walking through the jumbled rubble of what was once his neighbors' house, he looks at what is left: a fragment of a blue-painted room strewn with tattered magazines, a bicycle and other remnants of life.

"When will we have to leave? That's an unknown," he says.

"The sea advanced three or four meters in 15 days. Our wall might not last until next week."

Waked Peixoto's grandfather built the house as a vacation home, a beachfront getaway with large rooms and a garden.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Waked Peixoto and his family moved in full-time.

But it now looks inevitable the house will be swallowed by the sea.

"It will be a shame to lose this house, because it holds so many memories of my whole family," he says.

- Extreme erosion -

Atafona, a town of some 6,000 people, has long suffered from extreme erosion. It is part of the four percent of coastlines worldwide that lose five meters or more every year.

The problem is being exacerbated by global warming, which is causing sea levels to rise and making currents and weather patterns more extreme, says geologist Eduardo Bulhoes of Fluminense Federal University.

But Atafona has had a "chronic problem" for decades, he says.

The Paraiba do Sul river, whose mouth is in Atafona, has shrunk because of mining, agriculture and other activities that drain it upstream.

"In the last 40 years, that has drastically reduced the river's volume, meaning it transports less sand to Atafona," says Bulhoes.

With less sand, the town's beaches have stopped regenerating naturally, ceding ground to the sea.

Construction on the coast has only made the problem worse, by stripping away sand dunes and vegetation, the beaches' natural defenses.

The result has been disastrous for the tourism and fishing industries.

"Large boats can't come through the river delta anymore... and the money disappeared along with them," says Elialdo Bastos Meirelles, head of a local fishermen's community of some 600 people.

"The river is dead."

- 'Abandoned' -

Local authorities have studied several plans to curb the erosion, including building dikes to reduce the force of the ocean's waves and hauling sand from the river delta to the beach.

Bulhoes, the geologist, proposed the latter, which is modeled on similar initiatives in the Netherlands, Spain and the United States.

But the projects exist only on paper so far.

The county under-secretary for the environment, Alex Ramos, told AFP no one had yet come up with a definitive solution, and that any plan would have to gain environmental regulators' approval first.

In the meantime, the county has launched a social assistance program that pays 1,200 reais ($230) a month to more than 40 families who lost their homes to erosion.

But critics accuse the local government of a lack of political will.

"We keep hearing promises," says Veronica Vieira, head of neighborhood association SOS Atafona.

"But this town has been abandoned. It's an apocalypse. It makes you want to cry."

R.Mehmood--DT