Got a Water Crisis? Get More Hydraulics
How the Mexican border state of Sonora is rushing forward with
more water-management projects in response to escalating water crisis.
Part One: Introduction
to the Yaqui Water War
The
U.S. West was won by a strategy to capture the natural flow of rivers cutting
through the deserts. A vast array of water megaprojects reshaped the West’s
landscape and opened these aridlands for population growth and agricultural
development.
Wherever
the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation found rivers running free, the engineering
agency constructed dams, reservoirs, and aqueducts. The agricultural empires
and booming cities like Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Las Vegas of the arid West
are the offspring of these massive waterworks.
In
Mexico, the development of the country’s northern drylands and deserts mirrored
the U.S. model of hydraulic manipulation. The post-revolutionary Mexican
government launched a modernization plan in the 1930s that dammed region’s rivers,
redistributed land into irrigation districts, and transferred water to
previously uncultivated plains and deltas.
The
problems that stem from hydraulic megaprojects are felt throughout the
transborder West – a region that spans North America’s four major deserts
(Great Basin, Mohave, Chihuahuan, and Sonoran) and adjacent aridlands. It is a
region that William duBuys, author of A
Great Aridness, has described as the “North American Southwest.”
The
unsustainability of the water-use patterns of these aridlands is reaching
crisis proportions as climate change – with its higher temperatures, severe
weather events, and prolonged droughts – advances.
On
both sides of the international border, communities and governments are confronting
the limits of the region’s surface water and groundwater reserves. Social
clashes are erupting as water runs out or is being redistributed.
In
the heart of the Sonoran Desert, a bitter water war has been raging for the
past four years, dividing the state of Sonora into rival factions.
The
Yaqui water war erupted when the state government pushed through the
construction of a 155-kilometer aqueduct that transfers water from the Yaqui
River west to Hermosillo, the state’s capital and most populous city. The two
main protagonists are the state’s executive branch and the Yaqui indigenous
communities of the Yaqui River delta. Standing behind them are two rival
coalitions of citizens, political parties, municipal governments, agribusiness
sectors, and irrigation districts.
Similar
tensions are emerging as Governor Guillermo Padrés Elías proceeds with plans
for an array of dams, aqueducts, and water treatment and salinization plants –
all part of his Sonora SI
(Sonora Integrated System) waterworks program.
With
federal financing, the governor’s office is, for example, planning the construction
of a major new dam across the Mayo River in southeastern Sonora. The resulting
reservoir will displace many Guajiríos and threaten the very existence of the
diminishing group of indigenous people.
The
Yaqui water war is raising concerns about the sustainability of societies that
are dependent on dams, aqueducts, and giant irrigation canals. At the same
time, the conflict also raises the question: What other options exist to meet
rising water demands besides the construction of massive new waterworks that transfer
water from water-rich regions to water-poor ones.
Can
the intensifying water crises of the transborder West be mitigated or resolved
by a new wave of water megaprojects? What are the environmental and social
limits of waterworks that effect massive transfers of surface water and
groundwater?
The divisiveness and militancy of the Yaqui water war surpass those of other water conflicts in the transborder region. Breaking out in early 2010, Yaqui water war underscores the multitude of social, political, and economic tensions that emerge when traditional water distribution patterns are altered.
As the Yaqui water war evolves, there will surely
be lessons for all those living in the increasingly hot and dry transborder
West.
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