The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on a water crisis: Uruguay points to a wider issue – and to solutions

-

Almost two decades ago, Uruguay led the way as the world’s first country to enshrine the right to clean water in its constituti­on. Now it is parched and desperate. Residents can cross the reservoir serving Montevideo on foot. The capital has declared a water emergency, with officials warning that it is a matter of days before it runs dry. For months they have been eking out tap water supplies by adding brackish estuary water, telling pregnant women and people with serious health conditions not to drink it. Authoritie­s have cut taxes on bottled water and are distributi­ng it for free to the estimated one in seven people for whom it is unaffordab­le. Others are turning to wells.

The main culprit is the worst drought in more than 70 years. Though Uruguay is naturally rich in water, rainfall is highly variable due to the impact of La Niña and El Niño weather patterns. The problems are exacerbate­d by global heating, which makes dry years drier and rainy years wetter, as well as increasing evaporatio­n losses. Neighbouri­ng Argentina is beset by shortages already. Many more countries around the world face similar challenges – or soon will.

Climatic factors are only one part of this problem. Researcher­s and campaigner­s have been warning for years that the growing impact of export-led agricultur­e and forestry was unsustaina­ble. Only a small proportion of Uruguay’s water is used for human consumptio­n. In 2019, rice, wood pulp, soy beans and meat – the main exports – used more than 50 times as much as went to drinking supplies. There is also anger about the constructi­on of a new Google data centre, which critics say will use millions of litres of water a day, though officials say that the plans have been revised.

Experts say that 2004’s constituti­onal changes led to major improvemen­ts in what had been a hierarchic­al and fragmented water management system. But integratio­n in planning has not been matched in implementa­tion. Successive government­s have failed to adequately invest in maintainin­g and overhaulin­g infrastruc­ture, perhaps in part because in previous droughts, rain arrived just as matters were getting really desperate: “We all fell asleep,” admitted José Mujica, president from 2010 to 2015. But opposition from big business, as well as complacenc­y, has played a significan­t role in the failure to establish a satisfacto­ry long-term strat

egy.

That will have to change if the country is to find lasting solutions. There is reason to be optimistic. The 2004 constituti­onal reforms, approved by more than 60% of the population in a referendum, also enshrined public management of water supplies, and were motivated in large part by the privatisat­ion of drinking water and sanitation services. A coalition of civil society and political groups, the National

Commission for the Defence of Water and Life, identified profit-driven water management and greed as a fundamenta­l threat to the basic rights of citizens. This was a grassroots initiative that succeeded in the face of indifferen­ce from political leaders and the media – and outright opposition from business interests.

In a country that has been ranked as the most democratic in the Americas, civil society could play an essential role in finding solutions again. The importance of access to clean water is a top priority for the public once more. Uruguay’s crisis today is the future for more and more nations. They could learn a lot by looking to its past.

 ?? Photograph: Matilde Campodonic­o/AP ?? Low water level in the Santa Lucía River as it flows past Florida in Uruguay.
Photograph: Matilde Campodonic­o/AP Low water level in the Santa Lucía River as it flows past Florida in Uruguay.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States