Living with Drought: Lessons from Brazil's Semiarid Region
RIO DE JANEIRO, Oct 23 (IPS) - No one died of hunger during the worst drought in Brazil's semiarid ecoregion, between 2011 and 2018, in sharp contrast to the past when scarce rainfall caused deaths, looting, a mass exodus to the South and bloody conflicts.
Social programmes such as Bolsa Familia (family grant), an expansion of pensions for retired peasant farmers and assistance to low-income disabled and elderly people helped the poor overcome their vulnerability in the semiarid region, where more than 27 million people live in 1,127,953 square kilometres, slightly larger than the size of Bolivia.
But without the water supply solution represented by tanks and other devices to collect the scant rainwater, the tragedies of the past would certainly be repeated in the semiarid region, which occupies most of the Brazilian Northeast and northern strips of the Southeast.
More than 1.1 million tanks that harvest rainwater from rooftops ensured human consumption. The 16,000 litres held by each tank were used up during the unusually long dry periods, but the system made the distribution of water by tanker trunks, generally carried out by the military, more efficient.
In addition, the "technologies" or different ways of storing water were disseminated to more than 200,000 families in order to ensure food production on family farms, which total 1.7 million in the semiarid region.
The distributed water infrastructure guarantees better quality food for the farmers themselves, supplies towns and cities in the country's interior and boosts the local economy.
According to the Articulação Semiárido Brasileiro (ASA), a network of more than 3,000 organisations, including trade unions and farmers' associations, cooperatives, non-governmental organisations and social movements, some 800,000 small farms are still in need of tanks that collect water for agricultural production in order to universalise this technology.
ASA, created in 1999, promoted the One Million Rural Water Tanks programme, which was made a public policy by the government in 2003. It then expanded the initiative into the One Land, Two Waters Programme, which incorporated rainwater harvesting for crops and livestock.
The basic principle is "coexisting with the semiarid", instead of insisting on the old failed strategies of "combating drought", based on the construction of large structures that do not serve the scattered rural population, who are the most affected, but rather favour the large landowners.
Coexistence is not limited to the water question, but extends to education, knowledge of local conditions, ecological forms of production, and clean sources of energy.
© Inter Press Service (2020) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service
Where next?
Browse related news topics:
Read the latest news stories:
- Embedding Education into Climate Finance Will Deliver Desired Learning, Climate Action Outcomes Wednesday, November 20, 2024
- The Overlooked Crisis of Domestic Violence in the Workforce Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Don’t Lock Us Out of Negotiating Table—Indigenous Communities Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Qatar Committed to Achieving Nationally Determined Contributions by 2030 Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Definitely Not on Track to save Life on Planet Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Western Finance Ruining Economies of the Rest Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Mercury Pollution: A Global Threat to Oceans and Communities Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Contingent Mission in Haiti Exacerbates Gang Offensives Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Housing for Tomorrow: Sustainable Solutions from Habitat for Humanity Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Genocide: The Wheels of Justice Must Keep Turning Tuesday, November 19, 2024