Sunday, October 5, 2025

Beyond vanilla: Mexico home to 1,200 species of orchids

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Mexican Orchids
Orchids growing on trees at the Moxviquil Botanical Garden in San Cristobal. Despite affixing themselves to other plants, orchids are not parasitic. (Credit Moxviquil Botanical Garden/Facebook)

When British Surrealist Edward James founded his famous gardens in Xilitla, he was initially looking for a place to house his prized orchid collection.

He was one of many aficionados of the plant, and since Mexico comes second only to Brazil in its range of native orchid species, it makes sense that many Mexicans and foreign residents alike are involved in the conservation and promotion of these exceptionally beautiful blooms. 

A vanilla orchid
Mexican orchids are best known for the vanilla they produce, but there are 1,200 orchid species in the country, 444 of which are endemic. (Malcolm Manners/Wikimedia)

Just about everyone is familiar with one Mexican orchid, or at least its product — vanilla. Although most “vanilla” today is either fake or not from Mexico, the flavor has been prized since the Mesoamerican period, on par with chocolate.

But many of Mexico’s orchids have uses beyond vanilla and collectibles, such as medicine, adhesives and foodstuffs. One — Prosthechea radiata is even narcotic.

Mexico’s numerous orchid species — 1,200 species in 164 genera, of which 444 are endemic — come from the nation’s wide diversity of environments. Although most are found in central and southern Mexico, orchids can also be found in microclimates in the more arid north. 

According to the Environment and Natural Resources Ministry, at least 180 of these species are at some level of risk, and at least one is now extinct in the wild.

One of these is Laelia speciosa, native to highly populated central Mexico. Its threat is habitat loss, with urbanization, logging, agriculture and other human activities destroying forests and other ecosystems. The poaching of wild specimens is also still very common despite a near-absolute ban on the practice. 

Laelia speciosa
The Laelia speciosa is one of Mexico’s most iconic orchids, but it is threatened by habitat loss. (Wikimedia Commons)

Both public and private organizations work to protect Mexico’s orchids. The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) began its orchid collection in 1960, with 176 species forming part of its massive botanical garden.

Outside of the capital, there are a number of local and regionally-important collections. Vallarta’s Botanical Garden has had orchids as a focus since it opened in 2005. Even more impressive is the Lo de Perla Jungle Garden in San Pancho, Nayarit, near Sayulita. Other collections can be found at the Xoxoctic Botanical Garden in Cuetzalan, Puebla, the Moxviquil Orchid Botanical Gardens in San Cristóbal, Chiapas, and Animaya in Mérida, Yucatan and the Biori Botanical Garden in Orizaba, Veracruz. 

The popularity of orchids, I must admit, took me by surprise. I found all kinds of support for orchid lovers in Mexico, including a Rutopia tour focused on the orchids of Campeche and various Facebook groups on the plant. 

Perhaps one reason for orchids’ popularity is that hybridization allows for creativity in cultivation, but it also generates controversy. Elizabeth Coulterjohn, a local expert in Ajijic, states that the use of “species” can be controversial and its best left for orchids that have evolved naturally, rather than for hybrids. 

“Real world” orchid nonprofits and clubs are found all over Mexico. Established in 1971, the Asociación Mexicana de Orquideologia is a national-level organization with 28 chapters all over the country, concerned with protecting wild orchids and propagating domesticated ones, says Rebeca Alicia López Mendoza, a coordinator in the Asociacion. 

In Guadalajara, the main orchid organization is the Asociación Jalisciense de Orquideología, which collaborates with the University of Guadalajara for similar purposes. 

Orchid exhibits by the Asociación Jalisciense de Orquideologia at the Museo Paleontologia in Guadalajara help to raise awareness of the orchid’s role in nature. (credit Asociación Jalisciense de Orquideología/Facebook)

Many Mexican and expat communities of any size have at least an informal club. Many suspended or diminished activities during COVID but are now returning to normal activities such as plant sales and conferences. 

Both professional and amateur organizations have been important to the understanding of Mexican orchids. Until relatively recently, only the species native to the highlands  of central Mexico had been extensively studied. 

In the 1960s, Joann Andrews made her way to the Yucatán peninsula to find that almost nothing was known of the orchid species there. Almost entirely on her own, she published some of the first books on the subject. Jim Smiley came to Mexico around 20 years ago, fell in love with Yucatán orchids and continued Andrews’ work.

But knowledge and appreciation of Mexican orchids has its downside, as Andrews observed.

“In the ‘70s to the ‘90s, we had people come in, particularly from the United States, and take out a lot of orchids. Some of the beautiful orchids you’ll see on trees will be 30 to 50 years old. It takes a long time, five years before it even blooms,” she said. 

Unfortunately, poaching continues to this day. Coulterjohn says it has been a particular problem in the Lake Chapala area, and in the more than 25 years that she’s been a resident, the mountains north of the lake have almost been stripped bare. 

To be a responsible orchid collector, take care where you buy them. Under Mexican law, only licensed nurseries that use approved propagation techniques can legally sell orchid plants. From street vendors, you run the risk of buying illegally poached specimens or plants that are not orchids. 

Responsibility also means knowing how to take care of your plants. Temperate and tropical orchids have very different care requirements and do not do well outside of certain temperature and humidity ranges.

Laws related to orchids can be unclear about which orchids are protected and to what extent, says Smiley. The only absolute is that poaching and the possession of poached plants carries the risk of heavy fines and, in extreme cases, even jail time.  

Leigh Thelmadatter arrived in Mexico over 20 years ago and fell in love with the land and the culture in particular its handcrafts and art. She is the author of Mexican Cartonería: Paper, Paste and Fiesta (Schiffer 2019). Her culture column appears regularly on Mexico News Daily.

Protesters remove blockade at Culiacán airport

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Culiacan farmers
Farmers demanding government minimum prices for grain have agreed to meet Sinaloa Governor Rubén Rocha Moya to discuss a pathway forward. (Twitter)

Corn producers have agreed to lift their 40-hour blockade of Culiacán’s international airport and hold talks with Sinaloa’s Governor Rubén Rocha Moya over the disputed price of grain. 

During a brief radio broadcast, Governor Rocha said that talks would begin on Thursday and thanked the farmers for allowing the airport’s service to resume. 

Farmers protesting
Protestors were angry at a perceived lack of government support for grain producers. Sinaloa is the largest producer of corn in Mexico. (Twitter)

Around 200 farmers from across Sinaloa have blocked entry roads to the Bachigualato airport on Tuesday, demanding a raise in the guaranteed minimum price of grain. Protesters want 7,000 pesos per ton of corn, 8,000 pesos per ton of wheat and 6,500 per ton of sorghum. They are also calling for a government purchase program to buy 3.5 million tons of excess grain.

The government food security program Segalmex currently guarantees prices of 6,805 pesos per ton of corn and 7,480 pesos per ton of wheat but only to small farmers with no more than five hectares of seasonal crops. In May, Segalmex launched a program to buy one million tons of white corn from Sinaloa farmers at 6,595 pesos per ton, if they have up to 10 hectares of crops.

The protests affected 57 commercial flights. Aeromexico announced that it would allow affected passengers to change flights with no fees, while Volaris invited affected passengers to change their flights to nearby Mazatlán or Los Mochis. Viva Aerobus canceled several flights and asked for patience from passengers without announcing any protection schemes.

Despite the lifting of the blockade, services at the airport remained suspended on Thursday, with passengers advised not to go to the airport unless necessary.

Despite the end of the blockade, commercial aviation at Culiacán International Airport has remained suspended through Thursday. (Twitter)

The airport blockade is the latest in a series of protests by the state’s grain producers through May and early June. As Mexico’s largest corn-producing state, Sinaloa has been hard hit by a 50% collapse in global grain prices over the last 18 months after Ukraine grain exports resumed.

Analysts have warned that Mexico’s current grain market prices will leave many farmers unable to recoup their investment in this year’s production. If these farmers go bankrupt, it could fuel further inflation for food prices in Mexico into 2024.

During his daily press conference on Thursday, President López Obrador said he would not negotiate with the protesters, as they’d hoped.

“Our government does not allow blackmail,” he told reporters. “We are not going to give in, even if they have the airport, and also for their peace of mind, we are not going to use public force. I am very sorry because it affects those who use the airport, those who need to travel, but our government does not allow blackmail and even less from people accustomed to corruption.”

López Obrador also expressed doubts about the authenticity of the protests, speculating that his political enemies were instigating them and that the protesters were “elite” farmers used to getting subsidies from previous administrations’ programs.

López Obrador’s administration emphasizes small- and medium-scale farmers through the Producción para el Bienestar (Production for Well-Being) program, but has no supports for larger-scale farmers.

Governor Rocha has expressed more sympathy for the protesters but asked them to redirect their protests toward the large agricultural corporations who, he claimed, are to blame for the situation.

“Let’s go together to protest against those truly responsible for your crops going to waste: [agricultural corporations] Gruma, Cargill and Minsa,” he wrote on Twitter on Wednesday. “I am your ally and side by side with you, I will demand fair treatment and a fair price for your work.”

When asked whether he would take the governor at his word, the protesters’ leader Arnoldo Verdugo Aguilar told local media that further action would be decided during Thursday’s meeting.

With reports from El Universal and El Sol de México

Mexico’s foreign tourism revenue surpasses pre-pandemic levels

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Tourists in Mexico
Despite lower numbers of tourists, visitors to Mexico are spending more in the country. (Elizabeth Ruiz/Cuartoscuro)

Mexico’s tourism economy is booming once again, with revenue in the first third of 2023 far surpassing pre-pandemic levels, despite total tourist numbers still lagging.

International tourism contributed US $10.74 billion to Mexico’s economy between January and April 2023, according to INEGI, Mexico’s national statistics agency. This figure is 17% higher than the same period of 2022, and 17.5% higher than the same period of 2019.

Passengers disembark a cruise ship in Puerto Vallarta, 2021.
After the downturn caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, international tourism in Mexico is bouncing back with a 17.5% increase in revenue this year compared to the first four months of 2019. (Secturjal/Twitter)

However, despite the good financial news, the total number of tourists arriving in Mexico has remained slightly lower than before the pandemic in 2019. The 13.24 million tourists who visited Mexico in these four months represented a 13.7% increase from the previous year but a slight drop from the 14.7 million tourists who visited in the first third of 2019.

Average spending per tourist has risen by 3.8% from 2022 and 14% from 2019, reaching US $1,198 in the first third of this year for international tourists arriving by air. Air arrivals are also up — by 10.4% from 2022 and 6.6% from 2019 — compensating for a drop in tourists arriving by land, who tend to spend less.

Even in the cruise sector, which was extremely hard-hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, tourism numbers are strong. According to the Tourism Ministry (Sectur), 3.73 million cruise passengers arrived at Mexican ports between January and April — 3.1% more than in 2019. The revenue from these cruise tourists jumped 22.3% from 2019 to reach US $306.8 million.

In a press release, Sectur declared that these numbers show that “tourism activity in Mexico is on track.” Tourism is a crucial component of Mexico’s economy, representing just over 8% of the country’s GDP every year from 2010 to 2019.

Mexico’s borders never closed during COVID-19. Although tourist numbers nearly halved during the pandemic year of 2020, Mexico remained the third most visited country worldwide, and the industry has rapidly bounced back as international restrictions have lifted.

In 2022, the World Tourism Organization ranked Mexico ninth worldwide in foreign exchange capture from international visitors, and 28th place in per capita spending by international tourists.

With reports from La Lista

Reuters Institute reports Mexicans’ trust in news media declining

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Man reading a newspaper
Mexican trust in news has declined from 50% to 36% since 2019, according to a study by the U.K.-based Reuters Institute. (Foto de Sergio Gonzalez en Unsplash)

President López Obrador’s frequent verbal attacks on the press could be a factor in a marked decline in trust in the news among Mexicans, according to a U.K.-based research center and think tank.

In its 2023 Digital News Report, the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism said that trust in the news has declined to 36% in Mexico from 50% in 2019, the president’s first full year in office. Just over 2,000 Mexicans were surveyed for the study.

AMLO at a morning press conference
President López Obrador is seen here at a morning press conference discussing journalist Carlos Loret de Mola, who is frequently critical of the administration. ( Moisés Pablo Nava / Cuartoscuro.com)

The Reuters Institute (RI) said that López Obrador’s “repeated attacks against news companies may have impacted the steady decline in trust in the news over the last few years.”

The president’s “daily verbal attacks” on the media have increased in the past year “as he has continued to use his morning addresses, known as the mañaneras, to pursue his agenda,” RI said.

“Notable journalists including Carmen Aristegui, a host on CNN en español, war correspondent and radio host Carlos Loret de Mola, and commentator Victor Trujillo [better known as the clown Brozo] have all been targeted by the president, as have numerous domestic and international outlets.”

López Obrador asserted Tuesday that “it’s more than proven” that the majority of media outlets “manipulate” information and “are at the service of the oligarchy,” or Mexico’s powerful elite.

Ana García Vilchis
Ana García Vilchis during a “Who’s who in the lies of the week” segment of the morning press conference last year. (Moisés Pablo Nava / Cuartoscuro.com)

“There might be some exceptions, but … the majority of media outlets have [a preferred] party and defend interests. That’s why they don’t inform but manipulate. They have a political attitude and it’s a reactionary political attitude,” he told reporters.

A government spokesperson presents a fake news exposé segment at López Obrador’s Wednesday mañaneras during which she routinely criticizes individual journalists and media organizations for their allegedly false or biased coverage.

RI acknowledged that 180 Mexican journalists signed a letter late last year demanding an end to the government harassment. It also said that three journalists were murdered in Mexico in the first three months of the year.

“Human rights organisation Article 19 says that the Mexican government has developed a ‘strategy of disinformation’ while claiming to have created greater transparency and accountability,” RI said.

“This has happened, it says, while legal access to public sources of information has, in effect, been curtailed. [Article 19] also claims that about a quarter (26.5%) of the public information provided by government authorities was false.”

Published on Wednesday, the Reuters Institute’s report also noted that “TV and print have become gradually less important over time for our online sample, with social media widely used across age groups.”

“Mexicans are heavy users of social media, with YouTube and TikTok growing fastest for news,” it added.

Among 15 news outlets including the generic “local newspaper,” CNN was found to be the most trustworthy in Mexico, with 68% of respondents saying they trusted it.

El Universal, Milenio and Imagen ranked equal second with a trust level of 62%. Three in 10 respondents indicated that they didn’t trust Noticieros Televisa, making that outlet the least trustworthy. An additional 21% said they neither trusted nor mistrusted the news division of the broadcasting behemoth Televisa.

Mexico News Daily 

A fourth heat wave could hit Mexico as soon as July, say scientists

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Dog in Mexico City
The oppressive heatwave currently sweeping Mexico shows no signs of letting up, scientists warn. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

Scientists and researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) said at a press conference on Wednesday that a fourth heat wave could hit the country as soon as July 1, while the current heat wave sweeping over Mexico may continue for another 10 to 15 days.

According to Dr. Víctor Manuel Torres, a researcher at UNAM’s Institute of Atmosphere Sciences and Climate Change (ICAyCC), meteorological models foresee the possibility of an upcoming heat wave similar in intensity to the one currently bringing temperatures in the 30s and even 40s Celsius (80 to more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit) in 30 of Mexico’s 32 states.  

People shelter from the sun in Mexico City
July is expected to see a number of cyclones in southeastern Mexico, which could contribute to another heatwave next month. (Mario Jasso/Cuartoscuro)

Meteorological models are already forecasting two cyclones in southeastern Mexico that could precipitate more high temperatures around the beginning of July. They also show zero probability of rain clouds anywhere else, meaning that Mexico’s drought conditions could continue longer than experts anticipated. 

A study of weather patterns in Mexico City from 1880 to 2005 shows that the months of April and May are usually the hottest in the capital, followed by March and June. Heat waves usually don’t last longer than three or six days — any heat wave over 10 days is extremely rare, said scientist Graciela Binimelis.

Binimelis added that low levels of soil humidity have also exacerbated the situation, lengthening heat waves and causing “severe and extreme drought.” These extreme conditions have also caused “atypical” widespread forest fires, she said.

She also said that heat waves in the cities tend to be more intense — almost two degrees more than in the countryside — owing to buildings and human activities. This phenomenon is known as the “island of heat.” High temperatures in the cities can also result in increased ozone pollution, she said. 

The sustained high temperatures have also affected the country’s reservoirs, with 126 reporting levels below 50% of their water storage capacity. 

With reports from Radio Fórmula and SPD Noticias

From ancient Rome to Mexico: Meet winemaker Marcelo Castro

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Marcelo Castro Vera is a "rebel" making wines using the ancient technique of fermentation in clay pots in the mountains of Guanajuato . (Photos by Mukasha Dadajonova)

Glasses clink and chatter echoes around the farm as the moon rises over a family gathering in Vergel de la Sierra, San Felipe, Guanajuato. A young Marcelo Castro Vera watches as his family toasts the Sunday night to a close. He enjoys the wine they are drinking, but what fascinates him is not the maroon “juice”, but how it has brought the people around him together.  

Thirty years on and the very same landscape where a young Marcelo sat around a table with his family is now the birthplace of one of Mexico’s most exciting natural wines. 

Octágono’s selection of natural wines is made using wild fermentation, with no added sugars or yeasts.

Founded in 2016, Octágono is a small winery that is ambitious, rebellious and fiercely honest. It’s located on the grounds of El Nidal, a shipping container hotel Marcelo built on his family’s land, and produces wines that are sharp, punchy and full of energy. Octágono’s wines embody the man behind the brand.

Many have called his process of making natural wine radical. His curiosity and inventive spirit saw him become the first contemporary Mexican winemaker to produce natural wine in buried clay amphora pots as it was made thousands of years ago in ancient Rome.

“The goal is to let the grape express itself with absolutely no human interpretation,” he says. “We use four basic processes executed without any technological intervention or machinery.”

Grapes are picked by hand and then smashed by foot. It’s “messy work and not glamorous,” Marcelo says. Pressing grapes by foot promotes wild fermentation, with no industrial yeast or sugars needed. The gloopy juice is then macerated in buried clay pots and hand-pressed with rustic utensils up to nine months later. 

Winemaking in Guanajuato
The process followed by Marcelo and his team is an ancient one.

I ask whether his radical reputation is deserved. To me, it seems fueled by a rapidly evolving technological world in which insisting on creating a product without machinery is seen as “alien.”

Marcelo nods with a smile, but he sees himself more as a “rebel.”

“I think radical is too strong,” he says. “We do things differently here, and I believe we’re the first in Mexico to produce natural wine completely by hand. When we first started working on the idea to produce our own wine here, we talked for hours and hours about how we could ensure the product was natural and true to our belief that nature should do the majority of the work.”

“In our region, pottery is one of the most important local crafts,” he continues. “We talked about fermenting our wine in local pots, very similar to how Georgians use kvevris. That’s the path we went down, and I’m delighted about it. We use beautiful clay pots handmade by artisans from San Felipe and Dolores Hidalgo, which has helped bring more attention to another centuries-old craft.”

Octágono uses clay pots handcrafted in San Felipe and Dolores Hidalgo, Guanajuato.

Blending ancient multicultural crafts with grapes grown in the fertile soil of central Mexico produces a collection of distinct natural wines which are undoubtedly Mexican, but infused with classical techniques from Europe.

I ask about his opinion of conventional modern wine in Mexico. A few weeks prior to our conversation, a Mexican white wine was crowned the highest-scoring “international revelation” at the Concours Mondiale de Bruxelles (CMB).

I don’t drink conventional wine and so I can’t really judge it,” Marcelo says. “To me, it’s dead and boring compared to the energy and life of natural wine. There are thousands of conventional producers all following very similar guidelines on how to produce wine but only a fraction of them are creating natural wine. I don’t like to follow the crowd or be a sheep in anything I do. I’m only happy with my process when I’m going against the grain.”

Marcelo guides guests through a tasting at his popular San Miguel de Allende tasting room.

Much like his wine, Marcelo is unfiltered. It seems to me that someone as punchy and determined as he is, lovingly dubbed the “crazy professor” by friends and family, needs a close team to help guide his creativity. He agrees.

“My wife, Mukasha is the most important person to me and for the business,” he says, “Our small success here is probably more down to her than me! She is smart, ambitious, creative. She also knows exactly when to tell me to keep my feet on the ground and not move in a bad direction.”

A professional photographer, Mukasha Dadajonova was born in Uzbekistan, the main wine-producing country in central Asia. She is also a firm advocate for fermenting wine in clay pots, a millennia-old technique used in nearby Georgia. The couple met while studying hospitality in Switzerland.

Marcelo and Octágono’s sommelier, Celia Morales, make a dynamic duo.

If Mukasha is Octágono’s compass, then Celia Morales steers the ship. As head sommelier, Celia handles the everyday demands of the winery, something all the more vital when you’re producing natural wine manually. 

“We’re a small team, but we’re furiously committed to our values and making the wine we want to make,” Morales says. “We’re not people-pleasers but we love bringing people together to try our wine and food.”

Indeed, the brand’s 40-square meter tasting room, Tenerías #2, situated in the heart of cosmopolitan San Miguel de Allende, has become a very popular destination for locals, visitors and expats. Marcelo tells me it’s fully booked almost every day of the week.

Industrialization has no doubt increased efficiency, but at what cost? We’re on the cusp of a new generation of machine-learning, which will dramatically change our everyday working lives. Bucking technological progress may seem rebellious today, but people like Marcelo, Mukasha and Celia are playing a key role in conserving the best of tradition in a competitive, fast-moving world.

Gordon Cole-Schmidt is a public relations specialist and freelance journalist, advising and writing on companies and issues across multi-national communication programs.

Mexico finalizes Iberdrola plants acquisition

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One of the Iberdrola plants sold to the government, located in the state of Durango. (Iberdrola)

The federal government has formalized its purchase of 13 power plants from Spanish energy company Iberdrola.

The Ministry of Finance and Public Credit (SHCP) announced Monday that the government had signed an agreement to purchase the plants for approximately US $6 billion.

{Mexico's President Lopez Obrador and Iberdola
President Lopez Obrador and Iberdrola CEO Ignacio Galán have had their differences in the past over the president’s energy policies. In 2020, Galán threatened to stop Iberdrola from investing any more in Mexico. (Cuartoscuro)

“The contract confirms the terms and conditions of the agreement that the president of the republic, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, announced on April 4,” the SHCP said.

The ministry noted that the government has purchased 12 combined-cycle plants and one wind plant, with a combined capacity of 8,500 megawatts. The combined-cycle plants are in Baja California, Durango, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas, while the wind plant is in Oaxaca.

“The closure of the operation between Iberdrola México and the trust [known as] Mexico Infrastructure Partners [MIP] was carried out through a national investment vehicle with the majority participation of the National Infrastructure Fund of Mexico and with bank financing,” the SHCP said.

“This action provides legal certainty to the objective of the current administration to recover the percentage of electricity generation that allows energy sovereignty to be reestablished,” it said.

The purchase of the Iberdrola facilities has been criticized by some economic think tanks, but the government claims the acquisition will help Mexico to achieve its goal of energy independence. (Iberdrola/Twitter)

At his morning news conference on Thursday, López Obrador reiterated that the purchase of the plants from Iberdrola allows the state-owned Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) to increase its share of Mexico’s electricity generation market to 55%. The CFE’s share of the market before the purchase was just under 40%.

“It’s like a second nationalization of the electricity industry. … We’ve now recovered these plants for the nation,” said López Obrador, who asserts that his government is “rescuing” the CFE after years of neglect.

Some energy experts have questioned the wisdom of the government’s decision to buy the 13 plants because of their age and the cost of the transaction.

Iberdrola, which has been a major investor in Mexico’s energy sector, said in a statement that the trust led by MIP had acquired 55% of its “gross-operating profit (EBITDA) in the country, including the associated contracts and more than 410 related jobs.”

The abbreviation EBITDA stands for the economic phrase in English: “Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization.”

“Iberdrola will keep 13 plants, all its activity with private customers and its portfolio of renewable projects to continue increasing its wind and solar assets in the country in the coming years,” said the firm, which also noted that Mexico’s Energy Regulatory Commission recently authorized its generation permit for a 105-megawatt wind farm in Guanajuato.

With reports from El Universal, Milenio and El Financiero

Rainfall levels across Mexico reach historic lows

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Mexico has seen 20% less rainfall in 2023 than in the same period of 2022, according to the National Water Commission. (Daniel Augusto/Cuartoscuro)

Mexico is experiencing historically low levels of rainfall this year, according to the National Water Commission (Conagua). 

From Jan. 1 to June 11, the country recorded 20.1% less rainfall than in the same period of 2022, decreasing the level of water stored in the country’s system of reservoirs. 

Villa Victoria, one of the three reservoirs that supply water to Mexico City, is currently only at around 30% capacity. (Crisanta Espinosa Aguilar/Cuartoscuro)

In its weekly report on the state of the country’s large reservoirs, the Conagua said that the accumulated rainfall in the first half of the year was equivalent to 115.8 millimeters (mm). The average rainfall recorded in the same period between 1991 and 2020 was 144.9 mm, signaling a deficit of 29.1 mm.

Because of the blistering heat wave sweeping over many parts of the country and drought  in some regions, Mexico’s major reservoirs reported a drop of 2.5% in water storage levels between June 5 and 11.  

Of these 210 reservoirs, only three reported full storage capacity; the majority reported water storage levels below 50%. 

Mexico has suffered droughts that have caused diminishing water reserves since 2017. This has had particular impacts on large urban areas such as Monterrey, which made headlines last year when the city reduced running water supply for residents to only six hours per day. 

Of Mexico’s 210 major reservoirs, only 37 reported water storage levels above 75% as of June 13. (Conagua)

The storage reservoirs of the Cutzamala System (El Bosque, Valle de Bravo and Villa Victoria), which supplies Mexico City, fell to 48.5% of capacity in March, the lowest levels ever recorded. On June 13, the Conagua reported this level to have dropped down to 34.9%.

President López Obrador’s government has announced investment of over 93 billion pesos on 15 priority water projects nationwide, including dams and aqueducts. 

The Conagua, along with other agencies, has warned that the El Niño weather pattern, caused by warm water temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, could bring high temperatures and prolonged droughts in Mexico, as well as strong hurricanes in the Atlantic.

As the month of July approaches and the heat is expected to decrease, more rainfall is anticipated across the country.

With reports from El Economista

When you live in a beach town, summer changes everything

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People on beach in Mazatlan, Mexico
For Mazatlán resident Janet Blaser, summer's tourism influx brings headaches but also inspiring images of joie de vivre. (Rashide Frias/Cuartoscuro)

Right now, Mazatlán seems poised, waiting. There’s anticipation in the air. 

I’ve already had my air conditioners serviced in preparation for regular — dare I say constant — use after sitting dormant through the fall and winter and even a few months of what I guess we’d call spring. Living as close to the coast as I do, the condensers only last about four years max before they’re too rusted on the inside to work.

In tourist towns and beach destinations, we’re waiting for summer vacations too. Snowbirds often mistakenly think everything quiets down once they’ve left and that after Holy Week festivities, there’s nothing to do and no one around. 

It’s quite the opposite, though, and once schools are out, families all over Mexico go on vacation, most often to the beach.

They come to Mazatlán and Puerto Vallarta, Zihuatanejo and Sayulita — thousands of people filling the beaches and streets, taco stands, souvenir shops, hotels and anything that can be called a “vacation rental.” When I lived in Santa Cruz, California, it was the same thing: summer brought an exodus of folks from the inland cities seeking a day or a week at the beach to relax, unwind and enjoy.

Woman at Mexican open-air market in Mazatlan
Mazatlán gets so full with tourists in the summertime, the writer shops only early on weekday mornings in order to avoid crowds. (Courtesy of Janet Blaser)

From a resident’s point of view, these places become a kind of zoo, an unwieldy landscape where you must make accommodations just to live your regular life. 

I change my schedule and only go to the mercado and grocery stores early on weekday mornings. From Thursday to Sunday, I don’t visit friends at the other end of town; I do errands on foot as much as possible until it gets too hot to do even that. 

Traffic becomes unmanageable in many places, and even what are usually “back ways” become cumbersome, with out-of-town drivers on their cell phones trying to find their rental or a restaurant or who-knows-what. Street parking ceases to exist, and the public lots jack up their prices because they can — as do taxis, especially on the weekends.

Another sign of summer: the “gourmet” and imported sections of the big-box grocery stores empty out, and I know the shelves won’t be restocked until sometime in early November. I’ve learned to check expiration dates in the summer months before I buy a box of couscous or that half-gallon of imported organic apple juice. 

And the beaches! For me, this may be the most difficult thing: every inch of sand fills up with umbrellas, lounges, coolers and people, people, people. Mountains of trash are piled on the curbs — if we’re lucky. More often, it’s left on the beach to be taken out with the tide that night. If you go for a swim early in the morning — especially on a weekend — detritus from the day before bobs around you in the water, carried away from the shore by ocean currents.

Yet, there are bright spots too. It’s priceless to watch a multigenerational family lead their fully dressed grandma across the sand to step tentatively into the ocean, maybe for the first time in her life, as her grandkids and great-grandkids run and play in the water without a care in the world. 

And for every thoughtless person who litters, there’s a responsible somebody quietly picking up trash.

What I see in most of these visitors is a contagious joie de vivre, and for that wake-up call I’m grateful. That, more than anything else, is what makes these hot, humid, too-busy summer months special, turning them into a time of reflection and of looking inward. 

It’s a time of simple pleasures, of getting back to basics, realizing again exactly what those are and how fortunate I truly am. 

Janet Blaser is the author of the best-selling book, Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expats, featured on CNBC and MarketWatch. She has lived in Mexico since 2006. You can find her on Facebook.

En Breve: Councilor cocaine bust, record fish find, meth surprise

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US Customs and Border Patrol
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officers in Calexico, California. (CBP/Flickr)

Reynosa councilor arrested with cocaine in Texas

A municipal councilor from Reynosa, Tamaulipas, was arrested in the United States on Saturday for possession of what authorities said was around 42 kilograms of cocaine.

Denisse Ahumada Martínez, a National Action Party (PAN) councilor in the northern border city, was detained by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents at a checkpoint in Falfurrias, Texas.

Denisse Ahumada was caught with about 42 kilograms of cocaine by border patrol in Falfurrias, Texas. (Twitter)

Packages of “suspected cocaine were discovered in various locations” in Ahumada’s vehicle, according to a criminal complaint.

“A field test was conducted on one package which yielded positive for the characteristics of cocaine,” the document said.

Ahumada appeared in a federal court in McAllen, Texas, on Monday and Judge Juan F. Alanis ruled that she must be held in preventive detention as she awaits her next hearing.

According to the complaint, the councilor told authorities she was transporting the drugs to San Antonio. She confessed to having transported narcotics on past occasions as well.

Denisse Ahumada
The National Action Party (PAN) denied that Denisse Ahumada was a member and condemned her actions. (Facebook)

The CBP said in a statement on Monday that Rio Grande Valley Sector agents “successfully interdicted two cocaine smuggling events over the weekend.”

In addition to the Falfurrias seizure, about 11 kilograms of cocaine were confiscated at a checkpoint in Sarita, Texas.

Agents used both X-ray technology and police dogs to detect the cocaine, the CBP said, adding that the weight of the confiscated narcotics totaled 117 pounds (53 kg) and that the street value was over US $3.7 million.

The PAN’s Tamaulipas branch said in a statement that Ahumada isn’t a member of their party, even though she represented it after defecting from the Ecological Green Party of Mexico.

“We condemn the alleged criminal acts of which she is accused,” the statement said.

Seizure of totoaba swim bladders second largest in U.S. 

CBP said Monday that agents in Nogales, Arizona, had seized 242 pounds (110 kg) of swim bladders of the federally-protected totoaba fish. The swim bladders are considered a delicacy in parts of Asia, especially China, and can also be used in Chinese traditional medicine.

The CBP said that 270 totoaba swim bladders with an estimated value of US $2.7 million were seized on April 13 by agents working at the Mariposa trade facility in Nogales. They were “concealed within a commercial shipment of frozen fish fillets,” the law enforcement agency said.

 

“CBP officers contacted U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) who took possession of the bladders. Preliminary DNA testing by USFWS indicates that these bladders are the endangered species totoaba macdonaldi endemic to the Gulf of California in Mexico,” CBP said.

“This seizure is thought to be the second largest seizure of its kind in the U.S. and the largest Totoaba seizure in Arizona, to date,” it said.

“… Because the species is federally protected, in both the U.S. and Mexico, it is illegal to take, possess, transport, or sell Totoaba. In addition, the gill-net fishing methods used to catch the Totoaba have resulted in the co-demise of another endangered species in the Gulf of California, the Vaquita porpoise, Phocoena sinus,” CBP said.

“USFWS and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) are investigating the smuggling attempt of the prohibited item.”

Meth worth more than US $4 million concealed by Brussels sprouts

The CBP said last Thursday that agents in Calexico, California had seized 2,052 pounds (931 kilograms) of methamphetamine in a tractor-trailer transporting Brussels sprouts from Mexico to the United States.

Officers at the Calexico East Cargo Facility – located opposite the Baja California city of Mexicali – discovered a total of 148 packages of meth concealed within the floor and roof of the trailer, the CBP said.

The value of the narcotics, which were confiscated on June 2, was estimated at just over $4.3 million. A 51-year-old male driver who wasn’t identified by name or nationality was detained.

“Smugglers are constantly utilizing innovative methods to conceal narcotics,” said Roque Caza, Calexico Area Port Director.

“By combining officer intuition and utilizing advanced technology, officers were able to make a notable discovery within a shipment of produce. Excellent work by our CBP officers,” he said.

With reports from El Financiero, Borderland Beat and Sin Embargo