Chile drought causing water shortage amidst virus crisis

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LAGO PE¥UELAS, Chile, April 6, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – With historically low river
flows and reservoirs running dry due to drought, people in central Chile have
found themselves particularly vulnerable to the coronavirus pandemic.

Years of resource exploitation and lax legislation have allowed most
reservoirs in that part of the country to run dry.

“There are now 400,000 families, nearly 1.5 million people approximately,
whose supply of 50 liters of water a day depends on tankers,” Rodrigo
Mundaca, spokesman for the Movement for the Defense of Water, the Earth and
the Protection of the Environment, told AFP.

One of the main pieces of advice to protect people against coronavirus is
to wash your hands regularly.

“Living without water is awful,” said Dilma Castillo, who lives with her
children on one of the hills around El Melon, a town of 22,000 close to the
seaside resort of Valparaiso whose river has dried up.

“The worst thing is that there’s no awareness, even among the people here.
I’m very distressed because it’s humiliating to live in these conditions.”

In the greater Santiago area and in Valparaiso, rainfall last year was
almost 80 percent below the previous record low. In the northern region of
Coquimbo it was down 90 percent.

Water tankers serve many homes, whose inhabitants come out to fill drums.

The virus pandemic is highlighting “once more that where there is a model
of the private appropriation of water … this condition does not guarantee
people’s human right to water and further weakens communities,” said Mundaca.

Chilean law states that water is a resource for public use, but it turned
over almost the entirety of the right to exploit the resource to the private
sector.

In the Penuelas lake, an hour from Santiago, much of its bed appears
cracked by the sun.

“I’ve been coming here to fish for 20 years. At first we used to catch a
lot … now we don’t catch anything,” Tomas Ruiz told AFP from the banks of
what was left of the lake.

– Residents angered –

Matias Asun, the director of Greenpeace-Chile, said this week that the
government of President Sebastian Pinera must “guarantee that there are no
second-class citizens without the basics to protect themselves from COVID-
19.”

“Having soap is useless if there’s not enough water to wash with it,” he
said.

Chile has reported more than 3,700 coronavirus cases and 22 deaths.

Private exploitation of water wasn’t a problem in times of abundance, as
was the case until recently.

But the drought has brought a furious reaction from communities that have
run out of water in a country that saw an outbreak of social unrest in
October that only subsided when social distancing measures were imposed.

Around 100 residents of El Melon occupied a well managed by the Anglo-
American mining company, one of many multinationals exploiting Chile’s vast
copper reserves.

The occupiers are demanding that the well be used to provide water to
people living in the region rather than for mining activity, said Fabian
Villarroel, 26, one of the activists.

Anglo-American sent a statement to AFP saying it was committed to the well-
being of people living near its sites and was collaborating in the search for
“solutions that allow for inhabitants in the area to rely on a permanent
supply of potable water.”

– The water commodity –

“The 1981 water code separates the ownership of water from the dominion of
the land,” said Mundaca.

In Chile, “water is bought, sold or leased.”

The general director of Waters, Oscar Cristi, says the water rights have
been delivered to private companies, but the state controls those rights and
can limit the amount of water kept in reservoirs.

However, the state has never exercised that right and if it did, it would
have to compensate the private firms affected.

“The problem has to do with how those rights are distributed and what
conditions are imposed,” said Andrei Jouravlev, a member of the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.