Chihuahua Chronicles #6
Farmland is edging out the desert and grasslands throughout
Chihuahua. Along the main highways and between the mountain ranges that divide
the state, the arid state is turning green with corn, sorghum, and cotton, as
well as new cash crops such as potatoes and chile.
In Chihuahua, farmers are making the desert blossom. That’s despite
a succession of two record-breaking droughts that have ravaged the Chihuahuan
Desert region since 2000.
In Chihuahua, 135,000 hectares (2.47 acres = 1 hectare) have
opened to agriculture since 2001. At least another 100,000 hectares are
currently being developed for new farming, mostly by new Mennonite colonies.
The new agribusiness boom is not dependent on annual
rainfall or snow melt but on a proliferation of new wells that plumb ground
water that accumulated in closed basins under desert landscape.
There is something awe-inspiring about this transformation
of arid lands into lush cropping. Turning overgrazed rangelands and creosote-studded
desert land into highly productive farmland seems nothing short of miraculous.
Along toll highways that connect the cities of Juárez, Chihuahua, and
Cuauhtémoc, forsaken expanses of Chihuahuan Desert are now in bloom. And when
descending from mountain passes, formerly arid landscapes take on the
appearance of agricultural enterprises in the U.S. Midwest.
It’s a sense of awe at what mankind can do that must have
accompanied the government dam projects of the last half of the 20th
century that opened up more than a 100,000 hectares in Chihuahua to
agriculture. The runoff from monsoon rains and snow melt from the Sierra Madres
flowed into reservoirs that fed irrigation canals. Rangeland turned to walnut
and apple orchards, and small farmers that formerly depended on undependable
rains could flood their fields with the new miracle of reservoir water.
Today, the desert-farmland transformation is not the product
of concrete dams but of steel transmission towers. These giant towers now march
across the desert bringing electrical power to previously undeveloped and
uninhabited stretches of Chihuahua.
A network of giant transmission towers carrying power lines
that crisscross the state explains the miracle of modern agriculture in
Chihuahua. Without the electric current these towers carry, the Chihuahuan
Desert would not be blooming.
Paralleling the expansion of the rural electric grid, water
wells have mushroomed in Chihuahua and across Mexico’s arid north.
But miracles have costs and consequences.
Complaining is a common occupation of farmers and ranchers
worldwide. Most complaints concern the vicissitudes of weather, and especially
about the lack of rain in arid regions.
Another category of grumbling concerns the high price of
inputs and insufficiently high market prices.
As the record-breaking 2000-2004 began to take hold of
Chihuahua and northern Mexico, farmers were complaining not only about the lack
of rain but also about the rising cost of fertilizer and the low prices for
their products.
But the organized focus of farmer griping was the cost of
electricity. Before farmers get water, they need to get electricity to power
their pumps, which often work night and day to irrigate crops and orchards
throughout the six-month growing season in Chihuahua.
As water levels dropped and rains no longer complemented
irrigation, electricity costs increased with increased pumping and ever-deeper
wells. Farmer organizations, spearheaded by Agrodinámica Nacional, mobilized a
strike against the Federal Electricity Commission (CFE), Mexico’s electricity
monopoly.
Farmers routinely complain about the high cost of running
their pumps. Complaining that electricity costs cut into their meager profits,
more than 2,000 farmers in Chihuahua have refused to pay their electricity
bills over the past eleven years. In
March 2008 Agrodinámica’s leader, Armando Villarreal Marta, was assassinated –
by government agents, according to the farmer organizations in Chihuahua.
The electricity strike has stirred much unease, dissension,
and resentment in Chihuahua. Farmers who do pay their CFE bills resent those
who don’t. Yet even among those farmers who ignore their CFE bills there is
little righteousness because of the increasing realization of how profoundly
subsidized is the electricity that CFE provides agricultural producers.
Subsidized electricity for pumping leads to wasteful irrigation
practices outside Ascensión / Tom Barry
According
to the World Bank (using 2008 figures), it cost CFE $1.13 to generate and
distribute one kilowatt hour. However, if the CFE customer is a farmer, then he
or she pays just 2-3 cents on the dollar for the electricity used for pumping
and other farm operations. According to Mexican government calculations, which
indicate that the farm sector pays
only 28% of electricity costs, the level of subsidy is less dramatic but
still major and much higher than any other sector.
All electricity use in Mexico is subsidized, including
domestic, commercial, governmental, and industrial electricity consumption. But
the farm sector is far and away the most subsidized.
In Latin America, Mexico ranks as the country with the highest
electricity subsidies, with no other country coming close to the amount of
public resources used to keep electricity bills low.
(Next: Environmental
consequences of subsidized electricity for farm wells.)
The "El Barzon" group also destroyed a legal dam in compo#80 in july 2012.This dam was over 70 years old , built from concrete by Mexicans, an astaunishing piece of history that was done legaly. Why did they destroy it? What is there purpise behind this?
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