Weather creates water shortage affecting 900,000 in Mexico City

Close to 1 million people in Mexico City have been left without running water mainly due to high temperatures produced by a high-pressure weather system.

The water shortfall is being felt in seven of the city’s 16 boroughs: Iztacalco, Iztapalapa, Benito Juárez, Cuauhtémoc, Tlalpan, Azcapotzalco and Venustiano Carranza.

City authorities blamed an atypical high-pressure system, damage to the power grid by high winds, the diversion of water to aid farmers and a spike in demand by as much as 20% because of the heat.

Relief is still at least a few days away as the heat wave recedes northward; moisture is expected to reach the city in the coming days.

The director of the city’s water system, who explained that the capital went through a similar dry spell 85 years ago, warned that even if it starts raining on Monday or Tuesday, water service won’t be fully restored until two or three days after.

In the meantime, the government has deployed a fleet of 390 tanker trucks to distribute water in the affected boroughs. Each will make three trips per day, with which authorities expect to be able to deliver 12 million liters daily until the shortage is over.

The city estimated that the flow of water from the Lerma aqueduct has declined by 700,000 liters per second, while the Cutzamala aqueduct is operating at 60% capacity.

Elsewhere in the country, it’s hurricane season.

The first named phenomenon on the Pacific coast, Hurricane Aletta, strengthened from category 2 to 4 in the lapse of 12 hours yesterday, with wind speeds reaching 270 kilometers per hour. But the storm has been located well off the coast and was rapidly weakening this afternoon, the United States National Hurricane Center said.

It was situated about 430 kilometers southwest of Socorro Island, in the Revillagigedo Islands, and 865 kilometers south-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California Sur.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Members of Maná at a tree nursery

Maná to donate World Cup concert proceeds to reforesting Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta

1
Even free concerts take in money from the government, and Maná will be donating all of it to one of the social causes it has long been identified with: protecting the environment.
bags of fertilizer

Will Pemex’s US $5.4B petrochemical bet put a dent in its debt?

0
State oil company Pemex recently announced a 93-billion-peso (US $5.4 billion) investment aimed at revitalizing Mexico’s petrochemical and fertilizer industries, a move that experts say is a losing strategy.
map of earthquake near Cuba

Second Cuba-centered quake in 8 days shakes the Yucatán Peninsula

0
The seismic activity has startled Peninsula residents who aren't used to earthquakes. Initial fears that the second quake off the coast of Cuba would trigger a tsunami were eased by state authorities.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity