Case Study: Vargas, Venezuela
Vargas mass-movement facts
- Location – Vargas state, Venezuela
- Date – 15–16th December 1999
- Cause – Rainfall 40–50% above the usual average
- Events – Rainfall triggered flows of soil and debris
- Type of mass movement – Fast-moving debris flow
Hazard event
- Thousands of debris flows moved rapidly down the steep-sided mountains and narrow canyons
- The debris flow included boulders up to 10 metres in diameter
- In some places, the deposits created by the debris flow were several meters thick
- The debris flow speed was estimated at between 3 and 14.5 metres per second
Impacts
- Rain caused many mudslides, landslides and debris flows across the region
- There were between 10,000–50,000 deaths (many people were never found, and whole families were buried by the mudslides or swept out to sea)
- Over 150,000 people were made homeless
- Towns including Cerro Grande and Carmen de Uria were completely buried or swept away
- Over 70% of the population in Vargas state were affected
- The debris flow and mudslides destroyed many squatter settlements
- Bridges and roads were destroyed
- The seaport at Maiquet was affected, leading to hazardous material leaking from containers
- Crops were destroyed
- Economic damage was estimated at US$3.5 billion
- Communication systems were destroyed
- Supplies of food and water were affected for months
- Looting occurred across the region, meaning martial law had to be implemented for over a year
Factors affecting vulnerability
- The debris flows killed thousands of people as a result of a range of factors:
- High population density in the coastal areas
- Disorganised urban growth
- Poor quality buildings – many of the areas affected were squatter settlements
- Corruption amongst government and public officials, which allowed homes to be built in vulnerable areas
- In 1999, the government stopped collecting rainfall information:
- This data was used to maintain bridges, reservoirs and other infrastructure
- Lack of warning – no evacuation orders were issued
- The government ignored a report from the Civil Defense Agency that urged them to declare a state of emergency 12 hours before the main debris flows