Las Lajas Reservoir near Flores Magón in central Chihuahua / Tom Barry
Drought and climate change are the proper framing for the
water wars that are surging in Chihuahua. But money, politics, and power are
the fundamental causes.
Money has farmers, mainly although hardly exclusively
Mennonites, to penetrate federal and state bureaucracies to obtain well permits
and to ensure that electrical lines are extended to arid lands being prepared
for agriculture.
Mexico’s historic corporatist inclusion of the rural sector
into a decisive political base combined with the government’s attention to the
demands of large producers – as well as rhetorical commitments to food security
– have resulted in multibillion dollar subsidies for “rural development.”
In Latin America, no other farm sector enjoys such
high levels of subsidies for electricity. Mexican farmers and ranchers pay
only few cents on the dollar of the cost to generate and distribute
electricity.
A strong case can be made this immense subsidy for rural
electricity distorts prices, encourages waste, and primarily benefits large
producers while rural poverty remains endemic.
But the most pressing argument against subsidizing rural
electricity is that cheap electricity encourages the reckless exploitation of
Mexico’s endangered aquifers.
Dirt irrigation ditches common in water-starved Chihuahua / Tom Barry
Subsidized electricity has fueled the explosive expansion of
agriculture throughout Chihuahua.
In the mid-1990s, when a three-decade period of high
precipitation was coming to a close, Mennonite farmers began organizing new
colonies to transform desert lands to farms. In part, the shift by the
Mennonites from traditional to more capital-intensive farm practices explains
this new colonization of remote tracts of desert. The high birth rate among
Mennonite families and the consequent need to expand also help explain this
agricultural expansion.
As drought conditions became more common in Chihuahua,
overgrazing by ranchers and ejidatarios became
increasingly unsustainable. Massive cattle deaths – an estimated 400,000 in the
last two years – persuaded many ranchers to sell their rangelands. While the
lack of rain combined with traditional unsustainable land management practices
made ranching a losing proposition, these same nearly barren rangelands could
be turned into farms by tapping aquifers with deep wells.
With enough electricity, pumped water from underground water
basins could make the desert bloom.
Ironically, as drought conditions have intensified in
Chihuahua, the agricultural sector has boomed – doubling and tripling in many
districts. Since 2000 -- at a time when Chihuahua was experiencing its worst
drought – more than a 134,000 hectares have been brought under irrigated
agricultural production. Irrigated agriculture has expanded by 35% over this
past decade.
Without cheap electricity, this farm boom in Chihuahua would
not have been possible.
Irrigating in Mennonite colony near Flores Magón / Tom Barry
Economists, like those associated with the World
Bank report of 2010 on agricultural subsidies, contend that such government
supports distort the market and undermine the productivity of Mexican
producers. The more powerful argument, however, is an environmental one, which
the World Bank also made:
Agriculture consumes more than 70%
of the potable water that’s available in Mexico. There are various causes
contributing to the excessive water demand from agriculture, among which is the
fixing of electricity fees at levels that are highly subsidized – resulting in
the increase amount of ground water that farmers want to extract.
Water is treated like an unlimited resource. While many
farmers are switching to drip-tape irrigation systems to conserve water and
reduce electricity costs, it is more common to see water flowing through dirt
irrigation ditches and furrows.
Ignorance about the limits of the underground water basins
is widespread. One Mennonite farmer in Berrendo, a new colony on the border
with New Mexico, told me: “We don’t know about the sun. We don’t know about the
moon. We don’t know about the water below the earth. These things are things of
God, and we are here to use the resources and be productive.”
No comments:
Post a Comment