Sonora River Valley south of Cananea / Tom Barry
Mining Water in Sonora: Part Two
(Part Two of three articles on Grupo México's use and abuse of water resources in Sonora. First in series at: http://borderlinesblog.blogspot.com/2014/11/grupo-mexico-and-yaqui-water-war.html)
Governmental corruption and deception obstruct a full
account of Grupo México's water consumption and water contamination in Sonora. Despite the August 2014 flood of toxics in the Río Sonora, Grupo México has maintained a lockdown on information about its use of Sonora's water resources. At the same time, however, Grupo México floods business information markets with a steady stream of media releases boasting about its low-cost
production, surge in revenues, and oligopolistic hold on mining,
transportation, and ancillary service industries.
Since 1997 Conagua has issued a stream of permits to Grupo
México to extract groundwater in aquifers that the agency itself has repeatedly
declared as being severely over-exploited – where natural recharge rates are
far exceeded by the extraction rates. If
one were to accept that the firm used only the amount specified in its Conagua
permits, the copper mining operations in Cananea, according to one media
report, use 75% more than the seven municipios
in the Sonora River basin.1
In 2002-2005 Conagua issued nine concessions for mining in
Cananea area to Grupo México for water extraction from two aquifers that are
covered by federal restrictions or vedas
(against the drilling of new water wells, according to media reports in Mexico.2
The vedas – issued in 1967 and 184 –
prohibited all new water wells unless they were explicitly for urban public
use.
These permits, which the Vicente Fox administration issued,
allowed the extraction of 28 million of cubic meters of water from aquifers
that Conagua describes as being severely over-exploited.
Until recently Grupo México’s water permits – including five issued by Conagua in 2012 –
were for pumping in Sonora river aquifers (notably by the Bacanuchi tributary
that was flooded with sulfuric acid in August 2014). According to media
reports, Conagua in 2013 issued a wide-ranging permit to Grupo México to begin
drilling in the San Pedro River basin as part of its multi-billion dollar
expansion in the Cananea region.
According to a report by Proceso
and other media reports, this latest permit -- like the previous ones -- specifies that
the water should be used only for urban public consumption (“uso público urbano”)– not for mining or
industrial operations.3
None of these water-extraction permits includes permission for the discharge of
used water – whether contaminated or not -- back into the aquifer.
Conagua has not been forthcoming about the permits it has
issued to Grupo México for either its Cananea or Nacozari operations. Nor has
the federal agency provided any calculations of the quantity of water consumed
– with or without permits -- at Sonora’s largest mines. Upon questioning by congressional
deputies, Conagua director David Korenfeld did, however, acknowledge that at
least for four years (1999-2002) the Buenvavista mine did use potable water for
mining activities under an urban-use permit.4
Conagua is one of Mexico’s most corrupt, nontransparent, and
unaccountable federal agencies. Water permits are bought and sold regardless of
water-use restrictions or well-drilling prohibitions. Permits for one well
commonly are used to drill a battery of wells. The permits on record in Conagua
regional offices don’t even closely reflect the water-use patterns in any
region because of the proliferation of illegal, cloned, or “irregular” permits
that exist.
Conagua’s water-extraction permits for Grupo México’s Cananea
operations are what are commonly known as “concesiones
irregulars” – permits that don’t conform to the national water law. Yet
especially in the arid states, there are more irregular water permits than
legal ones, given the restrictions on new wells in overexploited water basins.
The Mexican government hasn’t filed criminal or civil
charges against Grupo México for what a federal government official called the
“worst natural disaster” in Mexico’s mining history.” That should be of no
surprise. The sheer economic power of Mexico’s largest mining company accounts
for Grupo México’s continued privileged status and impunity. Since the 1980s
the federal government (under both PRI and PAN leadership) has effectively
colluded with Grupo México to evade Mexico’s environmental and water laws.
1 Proceso
online, Sept. 23, 2014; Georgina Howard, “Permite Conagua desorden minero,” Reporte Indigo, Sept. 30, 2014. Media
reports cite a PRD congressional commission investigating the August 6, 2014
contamination.
2 Angélica Enciso L, “Minera Buenavista del
Cobre opera en Cananea con permisos de agua irregulars,” La Jornada, Sept. 23, 2014.
3 Proceso
online, Sept. 23, 2014 Georgina Howard, “Permite Conagua desorden minero,” Reporte Indigo, Sept. 30, 2014. Media
reports cite a PRD congressional commission investigating the August 6, 2014
contamination.
4 “Explotó Grupo México agua de ríos
ilegalmente: Conagua,” La Jornada,
Sept. 30, 2014.
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