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Severe drought returns to the Amazon earlier than expected

In several rivers in the south-western Amazon, water levels are the lowest on record for this time of year.

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Holder of one-fifth of the world’s fresh water, the Amazon is beginning the dry season with many of its rivers already at critically low levels, prompting governments to anticipate contingency measures to address issues ranging from disrupted navigation to increasing forest fires.

“The Amazon Basin is facing one of the most severe droughts in recent years in 2024, with significant impacts on several member countries,” said a technical note issued on Wednesday by the Amazon Co-operation Treaty Organisation, which includes Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela.

In several rivers in the south-western Amazon, water levels are the lowest on record for this time of year.

Historically, the driest months are August and September, when fire and deforestation peak.

A heron stands in a drying river
A heron stands in the Acre River, the main water source for the city of Rio Branco (Marcos Vicentti/AP)

So far, the most affected countries are Bolivia, Peru and Brazil, according to Acto.

On Monday, Brazil’s federal water agency decreed a water shortage in two major basins, Madeira and Purus, which cover an area nearly the size of Mexico.

The next day, Acre state declared an emergency amid an impending water shortage in its main city.

In June, neighbouring Amazonas state adopted the same measure in 20 of its 62 municipalities that are mostly only accessed by water or air, even in normal times.

These steps were taken more than two months earlier than in 2023, when most of the Amazon basin suffered its worst drought on record, killing dozens of river dolphins, choking cities with smoke for months and isolating thousands of people who depended on water transportation.

Brightly coloured boats on a drying river
Boats sit on the bank of the Acre River (Marcos Vicentti/AP)

The measures are used to increase monitoring, mobilise resources and personnel and request federal aid.

The depth of Madeira River, one of the largest Amazon tributaries and an important waterway for soybeans and fuel, went below three metres near Porto Velho on July 20.

In 2023, that happened on August 15. Navigation has been limited during the night, and two of Brazil’s largest hydroelectric plants may halt production, as happened last year.

In the Amazonas town of Envira, nearby rivers have become too shallow to navigate.

Local officials have asked elders and pregnant women to move from riverine communities to the city centre because otherwise medical help may not be able to reach them.

Farmers who produce cassava flour cannot get it to market. As a result, this Amazon food staple has more than doubled in price, according to the local administration.

A river winds through an urban area
The Acre River winds through the city of Rio Branco (Marcos Vicentti/AP)

Another concern is fire. There were about 25,000 fires from January until late July, the highest number for this period in almost two decades.

In the Amazon, fires are mostly human-made and used to manage pastures and clear deforested areas.

In Acre, the drought has already caused water supply shortages in several areas of its capital, Rio Branco.

These communities now depend on water brought in by lorry, a problem experienced the previous year. Between the two droughts, severe flooding hit 19 of the state’s 22 municipalities.

“It’s been two years in a row of extreme events,” Julie Messias, Acre’s secretary of environment, told The Associated Press.

“The result is that we are facing a threat of food shortage. First the crops were flooded, and now the planting period is very dry.”

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