Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

In South Texas, an old water system meets a region in flux

- By Suman Naishadham

McALLEN, Texas — On a scorching afternoon in South Texas, Sonia Lambert looked at an open-air canal

that carries mud-green water from the Rio Grande to nearby towns and farmland, losing much of it to evaporatio­n and seepage along the way.

“That will be someone else’s problem,” Lambert said, referring to her upcoming retirement as head of an irrigation district near the U.S.-Mexico border.

In the Rio Grande Valley, a canal system designed over 100 years ago for agricultur­e still delivers water to the region’s lush farmland and fast-growing towns and cities. Today, the canals lose as much as 40% of the water they carry, waste that experts say could contribute to steep water shortages in coming decades as the population grows and climate change intensifie­s droughts.

“As this region continues to become drier due to climate change, water supplies will be greatly reduced,” said Guy Fipps, a professor of irrigation engineerin­g at Texas A&M University who has studied the water system since 1998.

State water officials predict that over the next 50 years, demand for water

in the area’s cities and towns will double.

For decades, McAllen developed at a dizzying pace, with newcomers drawn to a large free-trade zone and jobs in health care, education and retail. Between 1990 and 2020, McAllen and the neighborin­g cities of Edinburg and Mission grew sixfold to nearly 871,000 people, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Similarly, the Mexican cities of Reynosa and Matamoros across the border mushroomed after

U.S.-owned assembly plants were establishe­d in the mid-1990s.

Further complicati­ng matters is a 1944 treaty between the U.S. and Mexico that defines how the countries share water from the Rio Grande. Mexico is supposed to route 350,000 acre-feet of water every year to the U.S. — enough to supply as many as 700,000 households. But it has periodical­ly failed to meet those obligation­s, delaying deliveries because of drought, tight water supplies and a thirsty crop industry in northern Mexico.

The late deliveries are a source of frustratio­n, but water managers and farmers in the U.S. are quick to acknowledg­e a major challenge at home too: the leaky canal system that has long been seen by local and state officials as too expensive to overhaul.

The region’s more than 2,000 miles of pipelines and canals — some 100-feet wide — are meant for large, infrequent deliveries to farmland. Common fixes to modernize the waterways and make them more efficient

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Sonia Lambert, general manager of Cameron County Irrigation District #2, at a pump station Sept. 15 in Texas.
ERIC GAY/AP Sonia Lambert, general manager of Cameron County Irrigation District #2, at a pump station Sept. 15 in Texas.

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