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Chile storms kill three, displace hundreds as heaviest rains expected

By Thomson Reuters Jul 17, 2026 | 7:49 AM

SANTIAGO, July 17 (Reuters) – Heavy rains sweeping central and southern Chile have left three people dead in addition to power cuts, multiple floods and road closures, authorities ​said Friday.

President Jose Antonio Kast traveled to the Biobio ‌region, one of the hardest-hit areas, as the storm system brought strong wind gusts and torrential rain across much of the country.

• The three dead include a worker clearing a road in the southern town of Negrete, ‌a ​person who fell while cleaning a ⁠roof in Temuco, and another ⁠person who suffered an electric shock in the capital, the government said.

• Friday is expected to bring the heaviest rainfall yet to the central zone, according to authorities.

• The ​director of Senapred, the government agency responsible for managing emergency responses, Alicia Cebrian, added that seven people so far have ⁠been injured, 79 affected, 466 sheltered ⁠and 158 isolated, mainly in the Coquimbo region ​due to rising water levels.

• Around 257,000 customers lost power, mainly ​in the south.

• Chile’s northern mining zone, home to ‌most of the country’s copper and lithium extraction, was not affected by the storm.

• Copper mines in the center-south of Chile were operating normally under standard winter contingency plans, which include temporary ⁠work stoppages when weather conditions deteriorate.

• State-owned Codelco said it had halted surface operations at its Andina mine due to the intensity ⁠of the storm, as ‌well as ore shipments from the El ⁠Teniente open-pit mine due to snow accumulation on ​the ‌slopes.

• Meanwhile, Anglo American said it had activated ​preventive protocols, ⁠and that the stability of its facilities was assured despite the heavy rains.

• Antofagasta Minerals temporarily restricted access to its Los Pelambres mine and implemented a preventive reduction in non-critical activities.

• Schools suspended classes on Friday.

(Reporting by Fabian Cambero. Editing by Lucinda Elliott ​and Aida Pelaez-Fernandez.)