MEXICO CITY — A struggle over water is brewing on the U.S.-Mexico border.
This week, President Trump threatened Mexico with new tariffs for failing to ship billions of gallons of water underneath a 1944 treaty governing the dispersal of three rivers that run via each nations.
“Mexico has been stealing the water from Texas farmers,” Trump wrote on Fact Social, warning that “we are going to preserve escalating penalties, together with TARIFFS and, perhaps even SANCTIONS, till Mexico honors the Treaty, and GIVES TEXAS THE WATER THEY ARE OWED!”
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum says her nation has not lived as much as its treaty commitments due to a relentless drought that has plagued farmers and ranchers in northern Mexico and left a significant industrial metropolis with dry faucets.
A cattle rancher stands subsequent to livestock that died of hunger in Sonora, Mexico.
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Occasions)
On Friday, Sheinbaum vowed Mexico would quickly ship “a big quantity” of what it owes, and mentioned her authorities has been assembly with U.S. officers on the matter for months.
She acknowledged the challenges of honoring a pact signed eight many years in the past, lengthy earlier than improvement boomed alongside the border and scientists found that local weather change exacerbates drought.
“If there’s no water, how do you ship it?” she requested.
The water battle provides one other dimension to strained U.S.-Mexico relations.
Trump has already imposed tariffs on Mexico — punishment, he says, for the nation’s failure to fight unlawful immigration and the manufacturing and smuggling of fentanyl.
Stephen Mumme, a political science professor at Colorado State College who’s an skilled within the treaty, mentioned low water ranges have left Sheinbaum in a bind: “There’s solely a lot Mexico can do.”
“I don’t know that commerce threats or punitive measures will actually enhance the state of affairs,” Mumme mentioned. “A number of that is simply hydrologically decided. They will’t manufacture water.”
On the coronary heart of the dispute is a treaty that requires the 2 nations to divide the flows from three rivers — the Rio Grande, the Colorado and the Tijuana — throughout their shared 2,000-mile border.
Underneath the treaty, the U.S. should provide Mexico with water from the Colorado, which flows from the Rocky Mountains down into Baja California.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum provides her morning information convention on the Nationwide Palace in Mexico Metropolis on April 2.
(Marco Ugarte / Related Press)
In flip, Mexico should give the U.S. water from the Rio Grande. The river — which stretches from Colorado to the Texas coast — and types the overwhelming majority of the border dividing Texas and Mexico. It’s largely fed by tributaries on the Mexican facet, so Mexico can management how a lot water it contributes to the river.
Mexico is meant to ship 1.75 million acre-feet of water — greater than 570 billion gallons — to the USA each 5 years.
The present cycle ends in October, however Mexico to date has delivered lower than 30% of what it owes, in accordance with the Worldwide Boundary and Water Fee.
In accordance with the treaty, Mexico is allowed to hold its water debt over into the following five-year cycle. Mexico has been pressured to do that previously — it first missed its deadline in 1997 — and has all the time repaid its debt.
However the delays infuriate U.S. farmers, who say that with out common water deliveries, they’re dropping their lifestyle. Final yr, Texas’ final remaining sugar mill shuttered, and all of its 250 workers have been fired, as a result of farmers now not have sufficient water to develop sugar cane.
U.S. Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn, each Texas Republicans, final yr pushed the White Home to “use each diplomatic instrument at its disposal” to make Mexico adjust to the treaty.

The Coachella Canal is a 122-mile aqueduct that conveys Colorado River water for irrigation northwest from the All-American Canal to the Coachella Valley in Riverside County.
(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Occasions)
Brian Jones, a south Texas farmer who grows cotton, corn and soybeans, celebrated Trump’s promise to punish Mexico if it delays water deliveries. For 3 years, Jones mentioned, he had been capable of plant solely half his ordinary crop.
“I don’t have a drop of water greater than I did yesterday,” he mentioned. “However now I’ve bought the president of the USA saying that he’s going to combat for me.”
Since taking workplace in January, Trump has dangled the prospect of tariffs on Mexican imports to win cooperation on points together with immigration and safety.
On March 4, he imposed a 25% tariff on all items imported from Mexico. Two days later, he suspended most of them, though new tariffs on autos made there went into impact April 3.
The Mexican financial system has taken a extreme hit, with the uncertainty scaring off new buyers.
As a result of Mexico relies upon intensely on sending exports to the U.S., Sheinbaum has largely sought to appease Trump. And whereas she struck a conciliatory tone on the water challenge on Friday, calmly describing his tariff risk as “President Trump’s method of speaking,” she can be underneath appreciable home strain on the difficulty.
In 2020, a Chihuahua lady was killed throughout clashes between Nationwide Guard troops and Mexican farmers, who forcibly blocked dams that have been getting used to ship flows from the Rio Grande to the U.S.
Former Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador determined as an alternative to offer Texas water from a unique supply: two worldwide dams on the border.
However that had sudden penalties of its personal.
In 2022, faucets ran dry in components of the sprawling industrial metropolis of Monterrey, with lots of the area’s 5 million residents with out common working water for months.

Authorities blamed a drought that has nearly fully dried up dams and a historical past of poor water administration. In 2022, residents in Monterrey, Mexico, have solely had water run from their faucets for a couple of hours every day.
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Occasions)
To flush the bathroom, launder clothes, wash dishes or bathe, residents have been forces to haul water by hand from wells.
Past drought, demand for water has skyrocketed lately, thanks partially to the explosion of producing hubs reminiscent of Ciudad Juarez, which is reverse El Paso, and Monterrey.
Mumme mentioned he couldn’t think about a situation during which Mexico was capable of fulfill all of its water ship obligations by October.
“To try to extract extra water from a system that doesn’t have it’s only a idiot’s errand,” he mentioned.
Cecilia Sánchez Vidal within the Occasions’ Mexico Metropolis bureau contributed to this report.