U.S. rejects Mexico’s request for special delivery of water for the 1st time
The treaty sets five-year cycles for these water deliveries, with the latest scheduled to end in October 2025, but Mexico has fallen behind due to drought conditions.
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said the issue is important and that it is being addressed.
“It is being addressed by (national water agency) Conagua and CILA (International Boundary and Water Commission), which is in charge of reviewing this treaty,” Sheinbaum commented on Thursday.
“There’s been less water. That’s part of the problem,” she told reporters.
On Wednesday, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said that he hosted farmers and ranchers from across the Rio Grand Valley, adding that their “situation is dire.”
“Mexico is refusing to comply with its obligations under the 1944 Water Treaty to provide water from the Rio Grande to the US, even while we go above and beyond our own obligations to give Mexico water. The effects on Texas have been catastrophic,” Cruz wrote on X.
“Last Congress, I introduced and advanced the first-ever legislation to impose sanctions on Mexico and withhold aid over noncompliance,” Cruz continued. “I will soon do so again this Congress, but I am also working with the Trump administration to impose consequences on Mexico right now.”
“Every option is on the table, not just withholding aid but also water we have been giving Mexico, which can be done without breaching our own obligations under the treaty,” he concluded.
Earlier this month, the Water, Agriculture, and Rural Affairs Committee voted in favour of the U.S. State Department ensuring Mexico meets its obligations to deliver the water to the U.S.The committee heard testimony from Rio Grande Valley officials on how Mexico’s failure to deliver water has impacted local farmers and stalled growth.
“It’s really causing a lot of severe issues not only for the valley but along the river from El Paso down to Brownsville,” Texas Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa said at the hearing.
“The reality is that even commercially, the growth of the valley is being stunned because we cannot issue any more builder’s permits because there’s no water,” Hinojosa said. “Hopefully, the present Trump administration will be a lot more aggressive in trying to address the issue.”
State Sen. Charles Perry had previously said that “it would be nice” if the Trump administration could include the water treaty in their tariff negotiations.
“It would be nice to include water release under the 1944 treaty in those tariff negotiations so that we could get some relief in the valley,” Perry said.