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Chile's "city of disasters" steps up climate change protection

by Sophie Hares | @SophieHares | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 29 March 2017 19:00 GMT

A loader works on a flooded street in Santiago, April 17, 2016. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

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"We are sitting everyone at the table"

By Sophie Hares

TEPIC, Mexico, March 29 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Reducing inequality, securing water supplies and strengthening disaster prevention are crucial to bolster Chile's quake-prone capital against climate change and other hazards, Santiago's authorities said.

In a new strategy to make the city more resilient, they laid out plans this week to cut congestion and air pollution, improve public transport and build more parks in low-income areas.

But better governance is essential to the strategy, said Claudio Orrego, governor of the Santiago metropolitan region, which has 34 municipal districts and mayors.

"Santiago is a city of disasters - we have had in the last year the worst fires ever, we had two floods in the city (and) two important water supply cuts," said Orrego by telephone from Santiago, which is home to more than 6.1 million people.

"All of this is due to the climate change impact on the city, and that requires protocols, coordination and infrastructure to cope," he said in an interview.

The strategy, released as part of Santiago's participation in the 100 Resilient Cities initiative, brings together programmes already underway in the city, one of the most unequal in Latin America due to wide gaps between rich and poor in housing, education and services, as well as gender inequality.

Rapid, uncoordinated urban growth has led to low-income housing being built on the poorly connected fringes of Santiago with inadequate infrastructure and few green spaces, said the report, noting that around 18 percent of residents of the greater metropolitan region live in poverty.

"We are sitting everyone at the table," said Orrego. "Be it flooding, be it earthquakes, we're taking an integrated approach to the future."

With climate change expected to reduce rainfall and increase temperatures in the area, Santiago wants to end overexploitation of its water supply. It is developing a water fund to help secure supplies for the city, and protect water sources such as glaciers high in the surrounding Andes.

"Having a public-private endeavour, trying to protect in a very holistic way all the water supply we use in the city is something new," said Orrego, stressing the urgency of the task.

The city's resilience plan includes measures to develop an early warning system to lower the risk of floods and wildfires - after a recent spate of devastating blazes reached the outskirts of the city, blanketing it with smoke – and to strengthen emergency relief efforts.

CRIME AND CORRUPTION

Situated in a dry, mountain valley, Santiago is likely to be increasingly affected by problems such as urban heatwaves and shortages of water and power, while agricultural demand for water could exacerbate drought conditions in rural areas, according to the report.

With the San Ramon fault line running along the edge of city, the resilience strategy lays out plans to link emergency response efforts and set up a system to monitor seismic activity, while tightening building regulations and factoring vulnerabilities into urban planning.

In the long term, the city may need to redefine its approach to zoning and land use, taking into account transport, social exclusion and disaster risks, said Orrego.

Michael Berkowitz, president of 100 Resilient Cities, which is backed by The Rockefeller Foundation, said cities across Latin America need to improve governance to stop crime, inequality and exposure to natural hazards hampering their development.

"It's understanding that if you have a safer, more equitable city, that will make you better able to withstand the next earthquake or the next flood," said Berkowitz.

The perception of high corruption is hindering the growth of public-private partnerships in the region and hobbling cities' resilience efforts, he added.

"If they can get some of these governance, transition, empowerment issues right, I think you could see Latin American cities make some real progress over the next 10 or 15 years," said Berkowitz.

(Reporting by Sophie Hares; editing by Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate)

The Thomson Reuters Foundation is reporting on resilience as part of its work on zilient.org, an online platform building a global network of people interested in resilience, in partnership with the Rockefeller Foundation.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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