Faced with an extreme future, one Colombian island struggles to rebuild

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8 Ways To Find The Best Web Design Agencies For Your…In 2020, Hurricane Iota destroyed most of the housing and infrastructure on the Island of Providencia, in Colombia’s Caribbean archipelago of San Andres.

No one on the Colombian island of Providencia was prepared for what happened on the night of Nov. 16, 2020. Not even Josefina Huffington, who had survived four hurricanes. That evening, as she waited for the storm to pass by playing parchisi with her son, a tree, lifted by winds as fast as“This is it,” she recalls telling him as she saw the roof fly away. They survived the storm, but their 1,700-hectare island, part of the San Andrés Archipelago, was turned into rubble.

“We know that, for the rest of our lives, we are now vulnerable to climate change,” Huffington says. “That was one of the reasons we decided to sue.” Huffington appealed to Colombia’s Constitutional Court, which decided to study the case in August 2021. Septic tanks and new water tanks also created issues. Some of the tanks leaked, contaminating patios. In a response toLocals complained that the water tanks the government installed were the wrong design for Providencia. Communities already knew how best to store water during the long dry seasons, using concrete tanks connected through pipes to the ceiling, allowing them to be filled during the rainy season. These tanks were so crucial that some used them as a refuge during the hurricane.

From Zully Archbold’s porch, looking beyond the pile of hurricane rubble the government left in front of her house, a line of white foam marks where the sea crashes into the third-largest barrier reef in the world. Providencia is walled by 32 km of corals that host nearly Providencia remains a telltale for other islands in the Caribbean that are increasingly vulnerable to extreme weather events. Image courtesy of Juan Pablo Pérez Burgos.

 

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