Climate Witness
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The international road to Chile is permanently submerged. © WWF/Pikielny |
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Osvaldo was born
on 28 February 1968 in Rufino, Argentina. Rufino is
the nearest city to Aarón Castellanos where Osvaldo has lived
all his life. His father worked as a railway worker and his
mother is a housewife. Oswaldo, a technical analyst programmer,
is married and has three children.
The province
of Santa Fe belongs to the region of La Pampa where the land
is very flat and mainly used for agriculture and farming. It
is the home of the gaucho.
Due to increased rainfall
during the last 7 years the La Picasa lagoon spread from
10,000 to 30,000 hectares, (and was at 50,000 hectares at its
peak) which washed away many farms, crops and homes. Many
members of the community have had to adapt to the change by
switching from farming and agriculture to fishing.
In
2003, Osvaldo Bonino was elected Head of the District of
Castellanos. He recounts:
"Aarón Castellanos, in the
southern part of Santa Fe, was founded at the end of the 19th
Century. It is a small town of only 300 inhabitants. But, of
course, before La Picasa lagoon's rise, Castellanos had more
than 600. We are part of the famous Argentinean Pampas: the
place of the endless grasslands, the home of the gaucho and,
thus, it was always a rural area."
Farms, crops and homes washed away
by the growing lagoon "Around these regions, it
has always rained, but always the necessary amount. In one
year, it usually rains between 800 or 900 millimeters.
However, in the last years, it has rained between 1.000 and
1.200 millimeters. La Picasa lagoon used to cover around
10.000 hectaresbut by 2004 had tripled its surface.
When the lagoon started to grow, in 1997, people
thought it was temporary. Around these regions, it's natural
to see how lagoons grow in certain seasons of the year; but
they always go back to their natural size. We thought that
this was going to be the case. So we waited -- but La Picasa
lagoon never reduced. It kept on growing and growing until it
flooded all our fields, our homes, our production. The water
took away what always has characterized this region:
agriculture and farming.
With a surface of the lagoon
of more than 30,000 hectares, people have to think what to do
in order to subsist. Many dedicated themselves to fishing.
Others, like the landowners, claim a fair compensation for the
loss of their lands from the government, which they will
probably never recover because the lagoon is not coming back
to its natural size. The lagoon has shrunk
considerably because of drainage measures and a year of
slightly less rain. But the road to Chile is still flooded
and the lagoon has to be circumvented by a makeshift carriage
way. And the land that was inundated will take a long time to
recover agricultural value -- if the lagoon remains smaller."
We want to regain our
pampas "This district is a zone where people
pass through. The only thing that connects us with the rest of
Argentina is the national route 7, which crosses Castellanos
town and goes to Mendoza and then Chile. We also had the
railway but not anymore. For almost seven years, both the
national route 7 and the railway have been flooded. Only the
ones who remember us, come to Aarón Castellanos.
We
hope that CO2 emissions are cut and that the governments do
something to avoid things to get worse. We want to regain our
Pampas."
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