In Three Months São Paulo Might Be Without Water If There Is No Rationing

Brazil's Cantareira water system Brazilian federal prosecutors have asked the government of São Paulo to present water rationing plans for Brazil’s most populous state to prevent the collapse of its main reservoir. If such plans are not presented in 10 days, the prosecutor’s office said on its website it may ask courts to force rationing.

São Paulo is facing the worst drought in more than 80 years. The key Cantareira water system, which provides water to some 9 million of the 20 million people living in the metropolitan area of São Paulo city, is at less than 16% of its capacity of 1 trillion liters.

Citing a study prepared by the state university of Campinas, the prosecutor’s office said that the Cantareira system could run dry in 100 days unless rationing is implemented.

The São Paulo state government’s water utility said in an emailed statement that it disagrees with the “imposition of water rationing, for it would penalize the population.”

Calling the drought the “worst in the state’s history,” the Basic Sanitation Company of the State of São Paulo said that it has already adopted measures that have resulted in savings equivalent to those of a rationing system of 36 hours with water and 72 hours without water. Among the measures it mentioned is the 30% discount in the water bill for consumers who reduce consumption by 20%.

The utility said it “guarantees water supplies” until the next rainy season.

In a normal year, torrential rains shower São Paulo, channeling water through rivers down the lime-green hills to the north. But this year, only a third of the usual rain arrived, with 23 centimeters falling during the December to February rainy season.

In May, the utility company started pumping water from underneath the gates of the reservoir’s dams. However the prosecutor’s office said that this water has a high concentration of pollutants, including heavy metals, organic compounds, bacteria, fungi and viruses.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Cracks Down on Biopirates

Brazil is a favorite target of biopirates and wild animal traffickers for the simple ...

Brazil and globalization

In the Globalization Going on in LatAm, Brazil Is Last in Line

Despite growing populism and political tensions, Latin America is becoming more globalized, according to ...

Brazil: Death Threats and Intimidation Still Common Where Sister Dorothy Was Murdered

“The victims have become the accused.” This quote from Friar Jose Amaro Lopes de ...

Brazil’s Paranaguí¡ Port Gets Deeper and Joins Big Leagues

Brazil's minister at the Special Secretariat for Ports, Pedro Brito Nascimento, announced this Thursday, ...

LAN Peru Now Flies Los Angeles-Brazil Six Days a Week

LAN Peru, a member of the LAN Airline Alliance, has just announced a  new ...

Brazil Warns: Respect Gays or Else

Following the lead of São Paulo and Rio, the state of Santa Catarina has ...

MPB, Brazilian Popular Music

How Music Has Brought Blacks Back to the Brazilian Melting Cauldron

Since the second half of the 20th century, global or ‘World’ music has become ...

Brazil Wants Free Trade Agreement with Japan and South Korea

More than 400 entrepreneurs will accompany Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on ...

A bus line in São Paulo, Brazil

Blackouts Are All Over Brazil, But No One Sees Them Unless They Touch the Rich

Every day, from morning to night, millions of Brazilians wait for public transit for ...

Public Defender Gets No Respect in Brazil

Brazil’s 1988 Constitution assigned state governments responsibility for establishing public defenders offices in the ...