Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Tourism secretary says sargassum situation is a national priority

Tourism Secretary Miguel Torruco Marqués said President López Obrador has ordered that addressing sargassum invasions be considered a national priority.

“The president . . . has made the sargassum problem a national priority,” he said. “Every Thursday at 6:00am, we meet to discuss the issue. [The president] designated Navy Secretary José Rafael Ojeda Durán to coordinate our actions.”

Torruco criticized the previous government’s handling of the issue, noting that it spent 800 million pesos (US $42 million) on efforts to control the macroalgae between 2014 and 2018, but did not have a comprehensive strategy.

“The sargassum phenomenon started in Brazil, in the Amazon River,” he said. “It started because of mining and fertilizer. Now, it’s become a Godzilla.”

Torruco added that the current government has plans to address the problem in the short, medium and long terms.

Navy Secretary Ojeda has announced that the navy will spend 52 million pesos on a strategy to control sargassum, but that amount represents only 5.2% of the 1 billion pesos the government of Quintana Roo estimates will be necessary.

The navy strategy includes the construction of four sargassum-collecting boats, the first of which will be ready in a few weeks.

Torruco said the government is also building floating barriers to prevent sargassum from washing up on beaches.

López Obrador previously downplayed the sargassum issue, saying it was “not very serious,” and charging that an emergency declaration by the state of Quintana Roo was disproportionate to the gravity of the problem.

On Thursday, the Confederation of Chambers of Commerce, Services and Tourism (Concanaco-Servytur) announced that in light of falling hotel occupancy rates due to sargassum, hotels in the Mexican Caribbean will be offering discounts of between 15% and 25% this summer in an attempt to maintain an average of 80% hotel occupancy, which was the average for last summer.

Source: El Economista (sp), El Financiero (sp)

Drone shot of the blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico

Gulf of America? Trump wants to change the Gulf of Mexico’s name

10
Donald Trump told the press Tuesday he'd be soon renaming the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. Mexico was not amused.
A close up view of a bullet casing lying on a nighttime street with lights in the distance

US citizen killed by state police in Ciudad Juárez

0
According to his family, US citizen Julián Alfredo Rodríguez Medina was unarmed when the Chihuahua state police officer shot at his car.
Migrant adults and children walking across the Rio Bravo. The water is up to their waists and shoulders.

Migrant crossing numbers at Mexico-US border reach new low

1
About 47,000 migrants were caught illegally crossing into the United States from Mexico in December, the news agency Reuters reported