Sean T. Hawkey Photography

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  • A boy cycles through the flood water in La Lima, Honduras, after hurricane Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_38...jpg
  • The ASOBAGRI installations were severely damaged by a flood.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_ASOBAGRI_20120316_0...jpg
  • A flooded area of Pimienta near San Pedro Sula, Honduras, directly after hurricane Iota. The water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_12...jpg
  • The end of the road. The main highway between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_12...jpg
  • Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including here in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_39...jpg
  • The main highway between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_13...jpg
  • The end of the road. The main highway between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_12...jpg
  • The end of the road. The main highway between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_12...jpg
  • Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including here in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_41...jpg
  • Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including here in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_39...jpg
  • In flooding around El Porvenir people ferry each other around in canoes after hurricanes Eta and Iota
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201124_44...jpg
  • A man drags a gas cylinder along a flooded road in La Lima after hurricanes Eta and Iota
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_44...jpg
  • Flooded housing at Tres Reyes. Between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • Flooded housing at Tres Reyes. Between San Pedro Sula and Tegucigalpa at Tres Reyes, Pimienta was flooded during hurricane Iota, the water came at 2am, a lot of people were prepared, but flash flooding caught many by surprise and they lost all their belongings.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • This man known as 'Calibre 50' is a snake hunter, here he's on his way to work on the flooded road to El Porvenir.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201124_45...jpg
  • This man known as 'Calibre 50' is a snake hunter, here he's on his way to work on the flooded road to El Porvenir.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201124_44...jpg
  • A man floats his girlfriend on an inner tube along a flooded road in La Lima after hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_43...jpg
  • Said Martinez scavenges for items of value in the mud left by the floods in La Lima, Honduras, after hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_37...jpg
  • The sale of wellington boots has gone up. The family selling them lost everything in the floods in La Lima.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_38...jpg
  • Rosa Isabel Zamora stands at the door of her flooded home in Tipitapa, Nicaragua. Estuar Stanley Huembes, 11, stands in her garden.<br />
<br />
Central America has been hit by torrential rains since last week after the succession of five hurricanes and tropical storms. Nicaragua has declared a state of emergency with 25,000 people affected by the floods.
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111022_2383.jpg
  • José de la Cruz Vilchez Machado, engineering worker with the Nicaraguan Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure surveys damage to tunnels and roadway at Sebaco. Central America has been hit by torrential rains since last week after the succession of five hurricanes and tropical storms. Nicaragua has declared a state of emergency with 25,000 people affected by the floods.
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111022_2356.jpg
  • Sea water flooded into an area of Old Havana. Increasing extreme weather events are linked to climate change.
    cuba_hawkey_20051024_004.jpg
  • Sea water flooded into an area of Old Havana. Increasing extreme weather events are linked to climate change.
    cuba_hawkey_20051024_006.jpg
  • Sea water floods over a road in Havana, Cuba during a storm. Increasing extreme weather events in Cuba and the region are linked to climate change.
    cuba_hawkey_20051024_003.jpg
  • Welders prepare a makeshift support for collapsing tunnels in Sebaco, Nicaragua. Central America has been hit by torrential rains since last week after the succession of five hurricanes and tropical storms. Nicaragua has declared a state of emergency with 25,000 people affected by the floods.
    nicaragua_hawkey_20111022_2361.jpg
  • Baltazar Francisco Miguel, general manager of ASOBAGRI, takes a look around the flooded installations. ASOBAGRI is a Fairtrade-certified coffee producer based in Barillas, Huehuetenango, Guatemala.
    Guatemala_Hawkey_ASOBAGRI_20120316_0...jpg
  • A flooded street in Havana. Increased extreme weather events in Cuba and the Caribbean region are resulting from climate change.
    cuba_hawkey_20051024_010.jpg
  • A government vehicle sprays passers by with muddy water in La Lima, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_37...jpg
  • A boat navigates along the main highway between San Pedro Sula and the port of Puerto Cortés after it was flooded with hurricanes Eta and Iota hit Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_16...jpg
  • A boat navigates along the main highway between San Pedro Sula and the port of Puerto Cortés after it was flooded with hurricanes Eta and Iota hit Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_16...jpg
  • Scenes of devastation in Choloma, Cortés, Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Personal belongings left under water for up to three weeks are strewn along the streets.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201118_16...jpg
  • Ubiratã de Souza Dias, or Bira, speaks about the movement of people affected by dams in the São Paulo region.<br />
<br />
The Ribeira de Iguape is the largest river in São Paulo State, 470kms long and is unusual in the region because it has no dams on it, but dams are planned here. Organised opposition to the dams has stopped a dam being built at Tijuco Alto already, and is actively opposed to the building of another three proposed dams in the area.<br />
<br />
The Movement by People Affected by Dams, (Movimento dos Atingidos por Baragems, MAB) says that the construction of dams and the flooding of valleys forces the displacement of people particularly indigenous groups and quilombolos (members of the 5,000+ historical rural communities begun by escaped slaves) and destoys livelihoods. Many of those most affected are indigenous people, quilombolos, poor farmers, landless workers, fishermen, who are not consulted, yet their lives are affected or their livelihoods ruiined by dams.<br />
<br />
Because of climate change we have an increase in extreme weather events, droughts and floods, and new records are being set for heavy rainfall, We can get so much rain that dams can collapse. Disasters are quite rare because  flood gates can be opened, but opening floodgates also causes flooding, it can cause damage and destruction of building and towns and crops, it can ruin livelihoods and kill people. In São Paulo state, because of heavy rainfall, floodgates were recently opened on nearby Capivari river at the UHE Perigot de Souza dam, flooding Eldorado and other towns. The company that owns the dam (Copel - Companhia Paranaense de Energia)  denies responsability for the damages.<br />
<br />
Sustainable renewable energy is preferable to emission-creating fossil fuel burning, but the human, cultural and environmental cost of giant hydroelectric projects is high and needs to be considered much more carefully. Successive governments in Brazil have made decisions to hand over land to privately-owned energy companies, an
    Brazil_Hawkey_water_WCC_20170913_041.jpg
  • Ubiratã de Souza Dias, right, show on a map where planned and existing dams are on local rivers.<br />
<br />
The Ribeira de Iguape is the largest river in São Paulo State, 470kms long and is unusual in the region because it has no dams on it, but dams are planned here. Organised opposition to the dams has stopped a dam being built at Tijuco Alto already, and is actively opposed to the building of another three proposed dams in the area.<br />
<br />
The Movement by People Affected by Dams, (Movimento dos Atingidos por Baragems, MAB) says that the construction of dams and the flooding of valleys forces the displacement of people particularly indigenous groups and quilombolos (members of the 5,000+ historical rural communities begun by escaped slaves) and destoys livelihoods. Many of those most affected are indigenous people, quilombolos, poor farmers, landless workers, fishermen, who are not consulted, yet their lives are affected or their livelihoods ruiined by dams.<br />
<br />
Because of climate change we have an increase in extreme weather events, droughts and floods, and new records are being set for heavy rainfall, We can get so much rain that dams can collapse. Disasters are quite rare because  flood gates can be opened, but opening floodgates also causes flooding, it can cause damage and destruction of building and towns and crops, it can ruin livelihoods and kill people. In São Paulo state, because of heavy rainfall, floodgates were recently opened on nearby Capivari river at the UHE Perigot de Souza dam, flooding Eldorado and other towns. The company that owns the dam (Copel - Companhia Paranaense de Energia)  denies responsability for the damages.<br />
<br />
Sustainable renewable energy is preferable to emission-creating fossil fuel burning, but the human, cultural and environmental cost of giant hydroelectric projects is high and needs to be considered much more carefully. Successive governments in Brazil have made decisions to hand over land to privately-owned energy companies, and their main m
    Brazil_Hawkey_water_WCC_20170913_073.jpg
  • Under the bridge in Registro, São Paulo, Brazil. The Ribeira de Iguape is the largest river in São Paulo State, 470kms long and is unusual in the region because it has no dams on it, but dams are planned here. Organised opposition to the dams has stopped a dam being built at Tijuco Alto already, and is actively opposed to the building of another three proposed dams in the area.<br />
<br />
The Movement by People Affected by Dams, (Movimento dos Atingidos por Baragems, MAB) says that the construction of dams and the flooding of valleys forces the displacement of people particularly indigenous groups and quilombolos (members of the 5,000+ historical rural communities begun by escaped slaves) and destoys livelihoods. Many of those most affected are indigenous people, quilombolos, poor farmers, landless workers, fishermen, who are not consulted, yet their lives are affected or their livelihoods ruiined by dams.<br />
<br />
Because of climate change we have an increase in extreme weather events, droughts and floods, and new records are being set for heavy rainfall, We can get so much rain that dams can collapse. Disasters are quite rare because  flood gates can be opened, but opening floodgates also causes flooding, it can cause damage and destruction of building and towns and crops, it can ruin livelihoods and kill people. In São Paulo state, because of heavy rainfall, floodgates were recently opened on nearby Capivari river at the UHE Perigot de Souza dam, flooding Eldorado and other towns. The company that owns the dam (Copel - Companhia Paranaense de Energia)  denies responsability for the damages.<br />
<br />
Sustainable renewable energy is preferable to emission-creating fossil fuel burning, but the human, cultural and environmental cost of giant hydroelectric projects is high and needs to be considered much more carefully. Successive governments in Brazil have made decisions to hand over land to privately-owned energy companies, and their main motivation is profit, not the wellbeing of Brazili
    Brazil_Hawkey_water_WCC_20170913_001.jpg
  • Fishing boats at Registro, São Paulo, Brazil. The Ribeira de Iguape is the largest river in São Paulo State, 470kms long and is unusual in the region because it has no dams on it, but dams are planned here. Organised opposition to the dams has stopped a dam being built at Tijuco Alto already, and is actively opposed to the building of another three proposed dams in the area.<br />
<br />
The Movement by People Affected by Dams, (Movimento dos Atingidos por Baragems, MAB) says that the construction of dams and the flooding of valleys forces the displacement of people particularly indigenous groups and quilombolos (members of the 5,000+ historical rural communities begun by escaped slaves) and destoys livelihoods. Many of those most affected are indigenous people, quilombolos, poor farmers, landless workers, fishermen, who are not consulted, yet their lives are affected or their livelihoods ruiined by dams.<br />
<br />
Because of climate change we have an increase in extreme weather events, droughts and floods, and new records are being set for heavy rainfall, We can get so much rain that dams can collapse. Disasters are quite rare because  flood gates can be opened, but opening floodgates also causes flooding, it can cause damage and destruction of building and towns and crops, it can ruin livelihoods and kill people. In São Paulo state, because of heavy rainfall, floodgates were recently opened on nearby Capivari river at the UHE Perigot de Souza dam, flooding Eldorado and other towns. The company that owns the dam (Copel - Companhia Paranaense de Energia)  denies responsability for the damages.<br />
<br />
Sustainable renewable energy is preferable to emission-creating fossil fuel burning, but the human, cultural and environmental cost of giant hydroelectric projects is high and needs to be considered much more carefully. Successive governments in Brazil have made decisions to hand over land to privately-owned energy companies, and their main motivation is profit, not the wellbeing of Brazilian
    Brazil_Hawkey_water_WCC_20170913_007.jpg
  • At night in the La Planeta neighbourhood of San Pedro Sula, the flood waters of hurricane Iota flooded tens of thousands of houses destroying the contents of most of the houses. Fatalities were low, but many people spent days on roofs waiting to be rescued.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_22...jpg
  • At night in the La Planeta neighbourhood of San Pedro Sula, the flood waters of hurricane Iota flooded tens of thousands of houses destroying the contents of most of the houses. Fatalities were low, but many people spent days on roofs waiting to be rescued.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_22...jpg
  • At night in the La Planeta neighbourhood of San Pedro Sula, a man cycles through a shallow part of the flood waters of hurrican Iota that flooded tens of thousands of houses destroying the contents of most of the houses. Fatalities were low, but many people spent days on roofs waiting to be rescued.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_21...jpg
  • At night in the La Planeta neighbourhood of San Pedro Sula, the flood waters of hurricane Iota flooded tens of thousands of houses destroying the contents of most of the houses. Fatalities were low, but many people spent days on roofs waiting to be rescued.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_21...jpg
  • Noemí Santillo, from Jerusalén neighbourhood in San Pedro Sula, cooks food for people who have left their flooded houses and are living in a shelter provided at a school run by the Episcopal Church of Honduras. Noemí left her house when the flood water was chest height.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201117_76...jpg
  • Daniela Orellana, carries a cloth with all her belongings and waits for the flood water to recede in Pimienta, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_28...jpg
  • A car in La Planeta neighbourhood, one of thousands that were submerged by flood waters during hurricanes Eta and Iota.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_31...jpg
  • A blue-painted house was covered by flood waters during hurricanes Eta and Iota in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_25...jpg
  • During the heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, the flood plain along the river Copán spread quickly across a lot of fertile land used for farming and causing immense damage to standing crops such as beans, maize and tomatoes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • During the heavy rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota, the flood plain along the river Copán spread quickly across a lot of fertile land used for farming and causing immense damage to standing crops such as beans, maize and tomatoes.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201129_64...jpg
  • A woman walks through the flood water in La Lima, Honduras, after hurricane Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_38...jpg
  • A family waits for flood waters to recede in Pimianta, Honduras. Their house is behind them in the photograph. Gérman Velásquez, Ermelino Monterrosa, Oscar lopez, Leslie de López, Xavier andSadie Sarahí.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_29...jpg
  • The main road through El Calan was destroyed when flood waters from hurricane Eta and Iota washed away the bridge over the waterway called Quebrada El Calan.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • A man who has lost his house in hurrican Eta waiting in a makeshift shelter in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, for the flood waters to recede.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_19...jpg
  • Part of the bridge leaving La Ceiba lies in the river bed, washed away by the flood waters that came with hurricane Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201201_81...jpg
  • A man wades chest-high in flood water in La Lima, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_43...jpg
  • Jaffet Quesada Murillo, 9, plays in fast-flowing flood waters in San Pedro Sula after hurricanes Eta and Iota devasted housing and crops in the area.<br />
<br />
Photograph taken with his mother's verbal consent.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_19...jpg
  • Part of the bridge leaving La Ceiba lies in the river bed, washed away by the flood waters that came with hurricane Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201201_81...jpg
  • Flood waters from hurricanes Eta and Iota in Colonia Sitraterco, La Lima, Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_39...jpg
  • Two men wade through the flood water in La Lima, Honduras, after hurricane Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_38...jpg
  • Jaffet Quesada Murillo, 9, plays in fast-flowing flood waters in San Pedro Sula after hurricanes Eta and Iota devasted housing and crops in the area.<br />
<br />
Photograph taken with his mother's verbal consent.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_19...jpg
  • Mother and daughter wait for flood waters to recede in Pimienta, Honduras. Their house is behind them in the photograph.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_28...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_89...jpg
  • African palm plantation affected by floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_89...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_88...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201203_88...jpg
  • Edgardo Barahona in Dos Bocas, Santa Rosa de Aguán, Honduras. Standing crops of maize and beans have been lost across the region because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and Iota. Some crops rotted, some dried out, many crops sprouted on the their stems before they could be harvested, most of the staple crops have been lost. Nutrients have been washed out of the soil too and a huge wave of fungal diseases like canker and leaf rust are just beginning. Cash crops like coffee are badly affected as well as food for local consumption.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201202_84...jpg
  • Hurricane and flooding damage to the main road linking La Entrada and Copán Ruinas.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • Hurricane and flooding damage to the main road linking La Entrada and Copán Ruinas.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201130_80...jpg
  • Digna Maribel Mejía, Los Puentes, living in a shelter because the floods from hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away their houses. What do they most need? "a roof".
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_50...jpg
  • Inhabitants of Los Puentes walk over the area where their houses used to be. The houses were washed away by floods from hurricane Eta and Iota. Los Puentes, Macualizo, Santa Barbara, Honduras
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201125_48...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses. Here in El Zapote village, Gualala, Santa Barbara, 60 families were affected by complete loss or severe damage of their houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_91...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_90...jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • Flooding and landslides across Honduras after hurricanes Eta and Iota washed away roads, farms and houses.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201206_90...jpg
  • Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including here in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_42...jpg
  • Rony Turcios and Xiomara de Turcios hold each other as they cross Quebrada El Calan near San Pedro Sula, Honduras. The bridge was washed away in the floods of hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_25...jpg
  • A car buried in the silt from flooding in San Pedro Sula after hurricanes Eta and Iota.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_25...jpg
  • Views of the damage done by hurricanes Eta and Iota in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Many houses were washed away, leaving rubble or nothing, and many were badly damaged. As the flooding came unexpectedly fast many people lost all their belongings including their furniture.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • Views of the damage done by hurricanes Eta and Iota in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Many houses were washed away, leaving rubble or nothing, and many were badly damaged. As the flooding came unexpectedly fast many people lost all their belongings including their furniture.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • Views of the damage done by hurricanes Eta and Iota in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Many houses were washed away, leaving rubble or nothing, and many were badly damaged. As the flooding came unexpectedly fast many people lost all their belongings including their furniture.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201120_23...jpg
  • Caterine Urbina is a young mother who lives in the Juan Orlando Hernandez neighbourhood in Choloma. She is currently in a shelter provided by a church following the floods that came with hurricanes Eta and Iota
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • Suli Moncada lives near the river in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula, Honduras. When hurricane Eta came it caught them off guard, no one expected severe flooding so quickly, but the river bank burst in the night. Suli lost all her possessions and her house, but escaped with her children unharmed. CASM is helping her children in a programme and she has found a shelter run by a church for the meanwhile.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_20...jpg
  • The main highway between San Pedro Sula and the port of Puerto Cortés was flooded when hurricanes Eta and Iota hit Honduras.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201119_16...jpg
  • In the aftermath of hurricanes Eta and Iota, a cat walks through the mud in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_73...jpg
  • A street is filled with mud and and destroyed furniture in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_65...jpg
  • In the aftermath of hurricanes Eta and iota, a car sits caked in mud in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_64...jpg
  • A family begins to clear the mud from their house in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_60...jpg
  • A family recovers a bed from their house. They spent three days on the roof of the house waiting to be rescued.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_38...jpg
  • A man recovers a cooking stove from the mud in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras, after hurricane Eta.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_36...jpg
  • A woman carries a bag as she walks through mud after hurricane Eta in La Planeta, San Pedro Sula, Honduras.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_33...jpg
  • A man stands among the ruins of housing caused by hurricane Eta in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula. The building on the right is an evangelical church.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_25...jpg
  • Scenes of the destruction caused by hurricane Eta in Chamelecón, San Pedro Sula.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_21...jpg
  • Julia Mejía navigates the rubble where her house was in Chamelecón.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_12...jpg
  • People made homeless by hurricanes living under a bridge in Chamelecón, for many their houses and belongings were washed away.<br />
<br />
Hurricanes Eta and Iota hit hard on the north coast of Honduras, leaving some areas flooded for three weeks, destroying people's furniture, belongings, vehicles and houses as well as standing crops.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201116_06...jpg
  • Two young women travel in a boat provided by volunteers with Captain Santos Orellana in La Lima, Honduras. Volunteer marines with Captain Santos Orellana run a group called Del Pueblo Para El Pueblo (from the people for the people). During all the flooding the group has been running provisions into the most flooded areas including in La Lima. Many people didn't evacuate, afraid that thieves would rob the properties if left alone.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201123_39...jpg
  • Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua: “before this project, we used to only farm the traditional produce, wheat, rice, beans, that was it, nothing more. Not now though, we the new methodologies that we’ve learned, through the trainings and workshops. On my farm we have level curves, wind barriers, we are diversified. CIEETS has taught us all of that. We’ve set up a seed bank, because of the high risk of losing seed in drought or flooding. We’re planting yucca, bananas, plantains, fruit trees, citrus, pitahaya, lots of things. And now we have hygienic wells, covered up, nothing gets in them, with a pump. Before we had buckets and a rope, and stuff got into it. And, with the chickens, well, that is good for our own consumption, and to sell, we’ve made money from it”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1668.jpg
  • Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua: “before this project, we used to only farm the traditional produce, wheat, rice, beans, that was it, nothing more. Not now though, we the new methodologies that we’ve learned, through the trainings and workshops. On my farm we have level curves, wind barriers, we are diversified. CIEETS has taught us all of that. We’ve set up a seed bank, because of the high risk of losing seed in drought or flooding. We’re planting yucca, bananas, plantains, fruit trees, citrus, pitahaya, lots of things. And now we have hygienic wells, covered up, nothing gets in them, with a pump. Before we had buckets and a rope, and stuff got into it. And, with the chickens, well, that is good for our own consumption, and to sell, we’ve made money from it”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1650.jpg
  • Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua: “before this project, we used to only farm the traditional produce, wheat, rice, beans, that was it, nothing more. Not now though, we the new methodologies that we’ve learned, through the trainings and workshops. On my farm we have level curves, wind barriers, we are diversified. CIEETS has taught us all of that. We’ve set up a seed bank, because of the high risk of losing seed in drought or flooding. We’re planting yucca, bananas, plantains, fruit trees, citrus, pitahaya, lots of things. And now we have hygienic wells, covered up, nothing gets in them, with a pump. Before we had buckets and a rope, and stuff got into it. And, with the chickens, well, that is good for our own consumption, and to sell, we’ve made money from it”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1635.jpg
  • Yohanna de Socorro Calderón Flores in Los Chilamates, Carazo, Nicaragua, with a hive of Melipona bees. “Before this project, we used to only farm the traditional produce, wheat, rice, beans, that was it, nothing more. Not now though, we the new methodologies that we’ve learned, through the trainings and workshops. On my farm we have level curves, wind barriers, we are diversified. CIEETS has taught us all of that. We’ve set up a seed bank, because of the high risk of losing seed in drought or flooding. We’re planting yucca, bananas, plantains, fruit trees, citrus, pitahaya, lots of things. And now we have hygienic wells, covered up, nothing gets in them, with a pump. Before we had buckets and a rope, and stuff got into it. And, with the chickens, well, that is good for our own consumption, and to sell, we’ve made money from it”.
    Nicaragua_Hawkey_20190613_1437.jpg
  • a man pulls a boat safely to shore on a project for disaster preparedness on the atlantic coast of Honduras. The project helps avoids flooding and landslide disasters that have occured here in the past during the hurricane season.
    honduras_hawkey_20110617_597.jpg
  • A detailed map of risks drawn by villagers in a coastal area affected by floods and landslides during the rainy season on the Atlantic coast of Honduras near Trujillo. Noel Landaverde, coordinator of the Colón and Gracias a Dios region is on the right of the picture.
    honduras_hawkey_20110617_503.jpg
  • Standing crops, particularly of maize and beans, have been lost across Honduras because of the floods caused by hurricanes Eta and iota. Some rotted, some dried out, some sprouted, and the losses will have a huge impact among thousands of subsistence farmers who rely on the crops to survive.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • Coffee plantations across Honduras suffered extensive damage after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Many farms were damaged by landslides as well as widespread outbreaks of fungal diseases and root rot from flooding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
  • Coffee plantations across Honduras suffered extensive damage after hurricanes Eta and Iota. Many farms were damaged by landslides as well as widespread outbreaks of fungal diseases and root rot from flooding.
    Honduras_Eta_Iota_Hawkey_20201204_90...jpg
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