Ecuador Monday declared a 60-day national emergency amid intensifying wildfires and an acute drought. Energy Minister Ines Manzano reported 17 active fires and five controlled ones, with the southern Azuay and Loja provinces being the hardest-hit.On Monday, Ecuador declared a 60-day national emergency amid intensifying wildfires and an acute drought. Energy Minister Ines Manzano reported 17 active and five controlled fires, with the southern Azuay and Loja provinces being the hardest hit.
Risk Management Secretary Jorge Carrillo said Ecuador has suffered the effects of "this great drought" for "almost 120 days." Over 5,100 fires have been reported in the country in the January-November period, killing six people.Risk Management Secretary Jorge Carrillo said Ecuador has suffered the effects of the "great" drought for "almost 120 days." Over 5.1K fires were reported in the country from January to November, killing six people.
Ecuador’'s plight—drought, wildfires, and energy shortages—is a harrowing preview of a global future shaped by unchecked climate change. Once celebrated for its biodiversity and abundant hydropower, Ecuador now endures a water crisis that has crippled livelihoods and ecosystems. Forests burn as the Amazon, Earth's vital carbon sink, withers under record-breaking drought, echoing similar chaos across South America. This interconnected catastrophe, driven by human inaction and industrialized nations’' emissions, isisn't not Ecuador's alone. It's is a stark reminder: as the planet warms, fragile systems everywhere will buckle, and the human cost will be devastating. The time to act is fleeting.
Ecuador's current crisis reveals a tale not solely of climate change but of profound mismanagement. While the drought cripples hydroelectric output, decades of neglect and short-sighted policies have magnified the fallout. The relentless blackouts are emblematic of a nation where energy plans gather dust and infrastructure falters. Politicians rested on fleeting hydropower gains, ignoring calls to diversify energy sources and repair neglected thermoelectric plants. Missteps — from underfunding to ignoring El Niño warnings — expose a governance failure. This saga underscores not just environmental unpredictability butand human-made vulnerabilities, deepening Ecuador’'s woes.