The
movement of climate refugees is no longer hypothetical. It is now
happening. The scenes at America's southern border have their
beginning much further away.
El
Salvador, the tiny Central American state and the
most densely populated country in the region,
is one of the most murderous in the world, plagued by warring gang
factions and security forces who shoot to kill. Relentless bloodshed
and chronic unemployment have driven wave after wave of migration to
the North as Salvadorans seek a better life.
But
in recent years, widespread water shortages are increasingly helping
fuel unrest and forced displacement. It also has the region’s
lowest water reserves, which are depleting fast thanks to the climate
crisis, pollution and unchecked commercial exploitation. According to
one study, El
Salvador will run out of water within 80 years unless
radical action is taken to improve the way the country manages its
dwindling water supplies.
Years
of drought has prompted water rationing in urban and rural areas
across the country. Yet much is wasted: most rainwater is lost due to
widespread deforestation and eroded river basins; once in the system,
48% of water is lost through leaks. 90%
of El Salvador’s surface water is contaminated by untreated sewage,
agricultural and industrial waste, according to studies by
Marn.Nejapa is a semi-urban municipality on the northern outskirts of
El Salvador’s capital. Sources are
already running dry: the Nejapa aquifer provides 40% of the water
used by the overcrowded capital, but the water level has shrunk by
20% in the past five years alone.
“Marginalized
communities struggle day to day to get access to enough water. It’s
not a question that this could one day cause social conflict – it
already is … the whole country is close to crisis,” said Silvia
de Larios, former director of ecosystems and wildlife at the ministry
of environment and natural resources (known by its Spanish acronym,
Marn). “There
are no clear rules, no sanctions, no monitoring, and big business
uses these legal vacuums to exploit water as a product for profit.
It’s the poorest who suffer most,” said De Larios.
The
water problem is only exacerbated by corporate interests and
corruption. A lush forest, known as the
lungs of Nejapa, is being chopped down to make way for gated housing
developments with private underground wells. Nejapa’s biggest
industrial water guzzlers and alleged polluters – the local
Coca-Cola bottling company and sugar cane plantations – have been
unaffected by rationing. Behind
the Coca-Cola factory, murky, foul-smelling water can be seen pumping
into a stream.
A
network of grassroots groups, environmentalists supported by the
Catholic church convinced lawmakers to
make history in 2017 by banning metal mining – a
major cause of pollution. But politicians have so far refused to
create an independent regulatory system, which campaigners argue
would put human consumption and sustainability above corporate
interests.
Andres
McKinley, a water and mining scholar from the Central American
University (UCA), said: “This is a huge political issue; we must
change who controls water. That’s the war we’re in.”
“The
cycle of violence begins when the state abandons communities by not
providing fundamental human rights like water, education, health and
jobs – which end up being the fertile ground in which gangs and
violence grows,” said Jeanne Rikkers, a violence prevention expert
with the NGO Cristosal “But
the fix is only ever about the violence, never the root causes. As
water become increasingly critical, gangs will likely become involved
in community conflicts as the state is absent.”
No comments:
Post a Comment