The Paraná River dries up to the fire. Its flow, the second longest river in South America, suffers from the historical drought of its headwaters, in Brazil, also when crossing Paraguay and, mainly, in the channel of Argentina, where its waters are no longer a firewall and its now arid banks are being devoured by fire.
The scarcity of rain in all its courses is already reflected in the transformation of its flow, which is increasingly smaller, and the weather forecasts do not point to a change in trend in the coming months, so that this drought, more than cyclical , it seems structural.