Water reallocation, benefit sharing, and compensation in northeastern Mexico: A retrospective assessment of El Cuchillo Dam

•Reallocation needs to be designed and assessed in a regional context.•The design process for reallocation agreements matter greatly.•Compensation should focus on the region, not only the individual.•Drought can magnify the negative effects of reallocation.•Reallocation involves politics; effective...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWater security Vol. 8; p. 100036
Main Authors Aguilar-Barajas, Ismael, Garrick, Dustin E.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.12.2019
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Summary:•Reallocation needs to be designed and assessed in a regional context.•The design process for reallocation agreements matter greatly.•Compensation should focus on the region, not only the individual.•Drought can magnify the negative effects of reallocation.•Reallocation involves politics; effective negotiations and communication matter. In 1994, former President of Mexico, Carlos Salinas de Gortari inaugurated El Cuchillo reservoir to transfer up to 10 m3/s from the Lower San Juan River to the city of Monterrey, a major Mexican metropolis. Since 1989, three agreements have been developed to finance, construct and operate the El Cuchillo project to benefit Monterrey and compensate the farmers in the downstream irrigation district. This study reviews the agreements and lessons from implementation experience after 25 years since the project’s inauguration. The El Cuchillo demonstrates that water reallocation needs to be designed and assessed within a regional perspective to identify, measure and share the costs and benefits of reallocation between rural and urban regions. This case study shows the need to compensate the region not the individual.
ISSN:2468-3124
2468-3124
DOI:10.1016/j.wasec.2019.100036