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Media Tip Sheets

Mexico Water Crisis Continues – Perspectives from 鶹ƵU. Experts

Friday, August 19, 2022, By Daryl Lovell
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The water available to many northern Mexico residents is drying up for reasons that go beyond the impact of climate warming. Political decisions, international water law, and dwindling resources are also to blame, say two 鶹ƵUniversity professors.

woman looking into camera

Elizabeth Carter

is an assistant professor of civil engineering and earth sciences at 鶹ƵUniversity whose research specialty includes the study of hydroclimatic extremes.

Professor Carter says:

“The drought that is surfacing old bodies in Lake Meade is triggering a humanitarian crisis in northern Mexico right now, and I am really frustrated by the news coverage of it for two reasons. First, there is almost no news coverage. More than half of Mexico’s municipalities are currently facing water shortages, major cities are bussing water in, and it’s barely registering on U.S. news outlets. Second, I take issue with how the crisis is being framed. Mexican news outlets are blaming corruption in policing, corporate water use, failure of the Mexican government to enforce a new constitutional amendment declaring water to be a human right.  focuses on climate change, which is definitely at play here, but this is not purely a natural disaster.

“There is an elephant in the room. This crisis is about international water law. Most of northern Mexico’s major freshwater sources, like the Rio Grande, the Colorado River, and most major aquifers, flow across the US/Mexico border…at least they used to. Massive engineering interventions in the US, including the Hoover Dam, Glenn Canyon Dam, and the Central Arizona Project (Colorado River), the Closed Basin Project, the San Juan-Chama trans-mountain diversion project, the Middle Rio Grande Project, and the Rio Grande Project (Rio Grande) have northern Mexico’s major rivers running dry before they reach the border, even in humid years. With surface water, at least there are treaties in place to manage allotments.  There are no international agreements about the use of shared groundwater resources, and US groundwater law has created a corporate feeding frenzy that is draining shared aquifers so rapidly that the southwest is actually sinking.

“U.S. policy and infrastructure have played a major role in propagating this crisis. It feels important that people in the U.S. hear that side of the story right now.

 

Gladys McCormick

Gladys McCormick

is an associate professor in the history department at SU and an expert on Mexico-U.S. relations.

Professor McCormick says:

“Access to water – for agricultural, industrial, and potable uses – has a long, contentious, and complicated history in Mexico. Water infrastructure in most urban centers is plagued by a lack of oversight as well as a lack of modernization and needed upgrades. In major cities, including Mexico City, water infrastructure was never intended to serve the needs of such a vast population. In key centers for agricultural production in north-central Mexico, the need for irrigation has run afoul of communities protecting scarce resources. The problems surrounding access to water have gotten exponentially worse throughout Mexico because of climate change and in certain areas because of the presence of organized criminal networks that siphon off water through informal markets to the highest buyers. The government of Andrés Manuel López Obrador – or AMLO as he is known – has been unable and unwilling to expend the necessary capital to stem the water crisis because climate change has not factored heavily in his administration. This reluctance is compounded in the border regions between Mexico and the U.S. given heated negotiations between the two countries on how to share scarce resources.”
To request an interview or get additional information, please contact:

Daryl Lovell
Associate Director of Media Relations

University Communications

M315.380.0206
dalovell@syr.edu

  • Author

Daryl Lovell

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