By Sandra FERRER | AFP

Rio De Janeiro, Brazil – Porto Alegre, the Brazilian metropolis left submerged after torrential rains, had been lulled into a “false sense” of security by a vast but aging system of flood defenses, an urban drainage engineer told AFP.

Leomar Teichmann said a network of dikes, levees and a massive wall was meant to protect about 40 percent of the capital city of Rio Grande do Sul state in southern Brazil, where 150 people have died and hundreds of thousands were forced from their homes.

Teichmann is an engineering consultant and former deputy director of water and sewerage services for Porto Alegre, a city of 1.4 million people on the banks of the Guaiba estuary.

He told AFP he had already warned in 2019 that the city was at risk.

What does system consist of?

“The system was designed after floods in 1967 and built in the 1970s. It includes about 65 kilometers (40 miles) of dykes and a concrete wall of 2.67 km, as well as 14 floodgates and 22 storm water pumping stations.

“It was a simple system that seemed functional, since it guaranteed the protection of the urbanized part of Porto Alegre.

“However, it was never tested in practice until November 2023, because it was only on this occasion that the level of the Jacui River exceeded three meters (10 feet), which is the level of the Maua wall,” leading to flooding, he explained.

“In other words, the system stood for 51 years without the water of the Jacui River ever touching the wall.”

Why did it fail with latest floods?

“Gate Number 14 buckled under the great pressure of the water and began to leak with great volume and speed.

“The amount of water was so great that the nearby pumping stations were quickly flooded, causing the pumps to shut down.

“The flooding caused by the gate failure was so rapid that the entire region was flooded in a few hours.

“This flood eventually caused a power outage in the flooded areas, and as a result, all the pumping stations north of the Gasometer Plant stopped working,” he said, referring to an out-of-service power plant.

“There were several failures in sequence. In about 24 hours, the water level on either side of the system was exactly the same.”

What were consequences of these failures?

“Already in 2019, I stated that the protection system installed in Porto Alegre gave the population a false sense of protection and security, because there was no way to contain water in case of failure of any of the elements that make up this system.

“It is an old system, with many points subject to failure and requiring high investments in operation and maintenance.

“Much is said about Porto Alegre, but this same type of flood protection system was built in Canoas, Sao Leopoldo and Novo Hamburgo (other municipalities in the state) where the system was also overwhelmed by the water level.

“In all these cities the water very quickly invaded areas that should have been protected and caused greater tragedies than if the system did not exist.”

Teichmann explained that water spilling over the dikes moved much faster than rising river levels.

“I’m not saying that dikes are useless, but with a flood of this size, as soon as the dikes were overcome by water, the speed with which water passed to the other side of these was much higher than if the dikes did not exist.”

sf/lg/tmo/mlr/fb/mlm

© Agence France-Presse

Featured image: Rua da Praia, Porto Alegre’s city center. Credit: Bruna Cabrera / Editorial J | CC BY-SA 2.0

Image: Ms LEE Shuk Ming, Senior Scientific Officer of The Hong Kong Observatory (third left), Professor LAM Chiu Ying, SBS, former Director of the Hong Kong Observatory (fourth left), Professor LAM Yun Fat Nicky of the Department of Geography of the University of Hong Kong (fourth right) and other guests of honor at the event (s. climate action, HKU)
Extreme weather and sustainability in focus at HKU eventNews

Extreme weather and sustainability in focus at HKU event

Uniting cross-sector forces to inspire climate action in the next generation Jointly organised by the Department of Geography at the University of Hong Kong (HKU)…
SourceSourceApril 16, 2025 Full article
Image: Sea water | Ocean
University of Maryland secures $7.8M to advance renewable energy for ocean monitoringNews

University of Maryland secures $7.8M to advance renewable energy for ocean monitoring

New marine-based microbial fuel cells will overcome the need for batteries and ship-based or shore-based power cables. University of Maryland - UM Researcher Stephanie Lansing…
SourceSourceJanuary 3, 2025 Full article
Illustration 3d letter blocks forming the word news
Spain floods death toll hits 95: rescuersNews

Spain floods death toll hits 95: rescuers

Madrid, Spain | AFP - The death toll from devastating flooding in Spain has climbed to 95, rescuers and officials said on Wednesday, making it…
SourceSourceOctober 30, 2024 Full article