On Feb. 3, Mexico and the U.S. reached a negotiated settlement to their protracted standoff over a 1944 treaty governing water-sharing from the Rio Grande basin. Beneath the phrases of the deal, Mexico agreed to determine an annual minimal along with the treaty’s five-year quota for its water deliveries, whereas additionally making up for its arrears because of drought situations over the earlier five-year cycle.
For now, the settlement has calmed long-simmering tensions between the 2 neighbors over the water-sharing deal. However the underlying causes of Mexico’s water debt will probably be more durable to resolve. The nation has lengthy confronted a multidimensional water disaster that appears set to deepen with local weather change. Over the previous 5 years, greater than 80 % of Mexican territory has suffered droughts, a difficulty that more and more impacts city areas in addition to the agricultural sector, whereas fueling tensions with the USA over the phrases of the water-sharing treaty.
Mexico is just not alone in going through water shortage: Issues with water entry, sustainability and sanitation at the moment are widespread throughout Latin America and look set to worsen, with the Intergovernmental Panel on Local weather Change estimating that components of Mexico and Brazil will see their water availability decline by 10 to twenty % by 2050. Because the local weather worsens throughout the area, many governments share comparable dilemmas of overconsumption and aquifer depletion, which is predicted to exacerbate regional inequality.

