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U.S. has received 5 years’ worth of water from Mexico
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MERCEDES - Because of heavy rains that fell upstream of the Rio
Grande in September, the region's reservoirs have more than enough
water, and the United States has received five years' worth of water
from Mexico, officials said Wednesday.

Officials from the U.S. section of the International Boundary and
Water Commission, the binational entity that oversees water
reservoirs and levees on the U.S.-Mexico border, reported that
Amistad Dam in Del Rio and Falcon Dam, northwest of Roma, are nearly
at "conservation capacity."
Usually, once the reservoirs rise above that level, water is
released further downstream, but the swollen Rio Grande can't handle
those releases right now, said Patrick Daize, area operations
manager for the IBWC office in Mercedes.
"We only have controlled releases when the river can take it," Daize
said.
Daize and other officials spoke at a meeting of IBWC's citizens'
forum in Mercedes on Wednesday.
After northern Mexico received torrential rains in September, the
country released water from a reservoir that then flowed into the
Rio Grande, flooding parts of West Texas. That water eventually
traveled downstream to Amistad and Falcon and into the river's lower
reaches, causing the river here to rapidly rise in October.
Some portions of the Rio Grande here approached flood stage earlier
this month, according to the National Weather Service. In San
Benito, the river reached 51 feet in mid-October, 4 feet below flood
stage. In Brownsville, the river crested to 22.5 feet, just a few
feet short of flooding, meteorologist Mike Castillo confirmed.
River levels are dropping and are now well below flood stage, but
couldn't handle much additional water, so that water will stay in
storage for now, IBWC officials confirmed.
The heavy rains, interestingly, have allowed Mexico to buck a
longstanding trend. Under a 1944 U.S.-Mexico treaty, Mexico must
deliver 350,000 acre feet of water a year, in five-year cycles, to
U.S. reservoirs. After the massive downpours, though, Mexico was
able to deliver more than 788,000 acre feet in one year, putting
them ahead and resetting the five-year cycle, Daize said.
"They've already fulfilled their obligation," he said.
An acre foot is the amount of water it takes to cover an acre, one
foot deep, and provides enough water for two households for a year.
In the past, Mexico has frequently fallen behind on its water
releases. At one point, the Mexican government owed the U.S. more
than 2.5 million acre feet - enough water for 5 million households.
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