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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:35:02 PM
Creation date
10/11/2006 10:57:23 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8272.100.70
Description
Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Forum
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Water Division
5
Date
9/1/1991
Title
The Brownell Task Force and the Mexican Salinity Problem - A Narrative Chronology of Events
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />'~! d <br /> <br />Q. <br />~ <br />..... <br />~l <br /> <br />drain wa~r with additional water released from upstream storage; and constructing more wells , <br />at Welltop-Mohawk to permit selective pumping of drainage. <br /> <br />The Basil) states were initially unwilling to make any concessions to Mexico on water quality. <br />They poi(lted to the language and legislative history of the treaty as proof that Mexico was <br />compelled to accept drainage water of any quality (except brine aquifers) as part of its <br />allotment? In the eyes of many western U.S. water users, the provisions in the treaty were <br />consistent.with their own state water laws. Water law in the western United States recognizes <br />the right to appropriate water for beneficial consumptive use-with some inevitable decrease in <br />quality-ahd decrees that "first. in time is first in right." International water law, however, <br />generally follows the doctrine of riparian rights, under which downstream users have the right <br />to receive'water that has not been degraded by upstream users. <br /> <br />., <br /> <br />By the late 1960s, the states were convinced {)f the need to reach an accommodapon. with <br />Mexico. tJ.S. interests proposed a new basis for settlement: "equivalent salt balancC!," based <br />on a conC4pt from agronomy and irrigation engineering.s An irrigation system that is in "salt <br />balance" returns the same amount of salt in its drainage waters as was applied to the land. Salt <br />neither accumulates in nor is leached from its soil. . <br /> <br />Ci! <br /> <br />Proponent~ of the equivalent salt balance position recommended that the U.S. dilute <br />Wellton-Mohawk drainage with a quantity of purer water sufficient to reduce .the differential in <br />salinity be~een Imperial and Morelos Dams to that which would exist if the project wete.:insalt <br />balance-a~out 280 ppm. In theory, as excessively salty waters were gradually drained from <br />beneath W:ellton-Mohawk, the amount of dilution water needed would' decrease. Qnce the <br />project rea~hed salt balance, substitution for drain flows would no longer be necessary. 6 The <br />salinity of the water reaching Mexico would be that which the next downstream user would be <br />entitled to under U.S. water laws. <br /> <br /><. <br />:;~ <br /> <br />.~ <br />,\;. <br />.~ <br /> <br />." <br />~ <br />" <br /> <br />Myron R Jiolburt, a member of the Committee of Fourteen from California, explained the <br />assumptions ort which the equivalent salt balance concept rested 'as follows: . "(1) water :users in <br />theUnited $tates have a right to irrigate lands below Imperial Dam, (2)Mexico has to receive <br />drainage water under the Treaty, (3) creating a situation of ideal return flow conditions below <br />Imperial Dam with respect to salinity would be the best Mexico could expect, (4) the total <br />deliveries should be water of a quality that would be usable for irrigation of the type of crops <br />grown by Mexico, considering its soil conditions. ,,7 . <br /> <br />~ <br />'$I <br />":-~ <br /> <br />;~. ~ <br />: ;~ <br /> <br />,'c, <br /> <br />In the last days of the Diaz Ordaz administration, the U.S., with the support of the Colorado <br />Basin states; offered to negotiate a new Minute based on salt balance equivalence. The Mexican <br />government'called the proposal constructive, but chose not to enter negotiations on a long-term <br />agreement Until a new president, Luis Echeverria Alvarez, took office in December 1970. <br /> <br />~ <br />; ~." <br />': ~! <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />:;; <br />..,~.\. <br />. ., <br />. ,'. <br />.~~ <br /> <br />'j <br /> <br />The Search for a "Permanent, Definitive and Just Solution" <br /> <br />3 <br /> <br />....~~ <br />, <br />':i <br />~:,':~~J <br />:;'~1 <br />"-_ J <br />~ ..~j <br />':,~J <br /> <br />During 1971:, the U.S. and the new Mexican administration discussed a settlement based on the <br />equivalent salt balance concept. By November, U.S negotiators believed that they were close <br /> <br />~:'..'.'I <br />'yl <br />JD"JJ <br />
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