Irrigating desert at Mennonite colony on Mexico-U.S. border / Tom Barry
Drug war violence continues to besiege
Mexico, diminishing in some areas while surging elsewhere. As drug-war violence
has decreased in Chihuahua, simmering tensions over the state’s water crisis
have surfaced.
In this northern border state – the
largest in Mexico – it seems certain that conflicts over scarce water supplies
will shape the state’s future. The conflicts over this scarce resource in
northern Chihuahua will surely also affect binational relations.
It is highly likely that as Chihuahua
strives to ensure adequate water for state residents, crossborder tensions over
surface water treaties and transborder underground aquifers will likely rise.
As water becomes increasingly scarce in Chihuahua, state residents may consider
crossing the border into the United States as a survival option.
No one knows the extent of Chihuahua’s
water crisis. But in the past couple of years concern about the state’s water
future has heightened and resulted in conflicts between water users,
intergovernmental tensions, and increased citizen activism.
The lack of good information about
water resources and water use in Chihuahua, as elsewhere in Mexico, is due in
part to Mexico’s highly centralized system of government. States depend on
federal agencies to assess, monitor, and regulate water resources and water
use.
Another problem is that both the
federal and state governments have been more dedicated to the promotion of
water consumption for energy production, irrigated agriculture, and industry
than to water conservation.
The difficulty in assessing the impact
of climate change is, however, the main obstacle to constructing reliable
models of water availability and use in Chihuahua – a problem that is of course
not confined to Chihuahua.
The stark separation between the rural
and urban sectors in Chihuahua also obstructs a full appreciation of the extent
of the state’s deepening water crisis.
Drought and overgrazing leave land barren near Ascensión
Chihuahua is vast territory – nearly as
large as Great Britain. As might be expected, it is most sparsely populated
state in Mexico.
However, Chihuahua is not a
predominantly rural state. With nearly 80% of its residents living in cities, Chihuahua
is one of the most urbanized states in Mexico. It is the only state that has
two cities – Juárez and Chihuahua – ranking among the 20 largest cities of
Mexico.
Within Chihuahua’s urban areas, there
is little awareness of the state’s precarious water conditions. Even during
drought years, urban residents, for the most part, have been largely unaffected
by dramatically reduced precipitation rates.
That’s because domestic water comes not
from surface waters captured in reservoirs but from wells. As long as the city
wells are deep enough, water generally keeps flowing into the urban water
systems.
Huge reservoirs have over the past five
decades been constructed to capture the runoff from the mountain watersheds.
Drought turns these lakes into puddles. However, because of their remote
locations, few Chihuahuenses ever see these stark reminders of just how bad a
drought is.
The farmers and orchard owners in water
districts fed by these reservoirs live in fear that the reservoirs will be left
completely dry. Most Chihuahua growers, however, don’t depend on the heavens
for their water – at least not directly. Their crops are irrigated by more than
19,650 pumps that tap aquifers that have been creating underground water basins
in this region long before the arrival of humans.
The condition of the state’s aquifers
is the fundamental measure of water sustainability in Chihuahua.
Only the ranching sector, a
disappearing sector of subsistence farmers, and growers in several water
districts rely on surface water for their livelihoods.
Overall, the
titled extractions of water for agriculture, according to Conagua (April 30, 2012)
account for nearly ten times the amount of water dedicated to urban consumption
in Chihuahua – 4,286,505,358 cubic meters for agriculture compared to
471,290,161 cubic meters for urban users. This accounting greatly
underestimates groundwater use by farmers since it does not include the more
than 1,500 wells that lack a Conagua permit.
After
agriculture, the largest water-consuming sector in Chihuahua is electricity
generation, much of which is used for water pumping. Water used for electricity
generation – 2,311, 132,000 cubic meters – represents nearly half the water
extracted by legal pumps for irrigated agriculture.
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