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Denver-based burrito chain Chipotle recently warned that climate change could cause an avocado shortage
in 2014. Besides meaning a possible cut in offering guacamole, an avocado shortage in the United States
could lead to higher demand for the "green gold" in other regions of the world - like Chile, one of the
world's top avocado-producing countries. But this could mean disaster for small farmers there.
Ricardo Sangüesa owns a 20-hectare (49-acre) avocado farm on the banks of what used to be the Ligua
River. The area where water once flowed is now just a dry, stony riverbed, littered with garbage and
populated by stray dogs. Sangüesa says the river stopped running when avocado farmers, who used to just
cultivate the valley floor, started planting trees on the hillsides.
"Where does the water [to irrigate the hills] come from? From here, from this river," he says. As a result,
"the river has dried up," he claims.
Sangüesa farms in La Ligua, an agricultural region in central Chile just a few hours from the capital city of
Santiago. Due to regional water shortages, riverbeds have been dry and, sometimes, towns and small
farmers get nothing when they turn on their taps.
Driven by global demand for avocados, the question of where all the water has gone - and what should be
done about this - has pitted large-scale avocado exporters against small farmers and local communities.
Ricardo Sangüesa owns a small avocado farm on the banks of what was once the Ligua River
Dysfunctional water law
Carl Bauer, a University of Arizona professor who has written two books on Chilean water law, said Chile's
water problems date back to privatization of water rights under Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship.
When the law was first passed, individuals and companies simply filled out an application and, if there
was water and no one else owned it, the government granted water rights for free and forever, Bauer said.
These permanent water rights can be endlessly used, or sold to others.
The government often granted more groundwater rights than could sustainably be exploited, explained
Bauer.
"La Ligua area is one of the leading examples in the country of groundwater overuse," he said. People are
planting avocados on hillsides where land is still available, and then extending irrigation systems to reach
them. "It's an unsustainable use of groundwater," Bauer added.
In recent years, avocado plantations have started spreading up the hillsides in the Ligua area
Green gold leading to water pressures
At the rate of 10,000 cubic meters of water per hectare (about 3.3 acre-feet to 1 acre) of avocado, the river
can only maintain so many orchards, said Felipe Martín, president of the Chilean government's National
Irrigation Commission.
But the temptation to plant more avocados is great because of their high export value - Chileans even call
them "green gold." After Mexico, Chile is the world's second-largest producer of avocados.
And the European Union is the world's second-largest avocado importer. In recent years, EU demand for
avocados has been growing steadily. Chile is the source for 10 to 20 percent of Europe's avocado imports.
Ligua River, dry for years now, used to flow with water from the Andes
Root problem
Martín added that new infrastructure alone won't solve the problem - famers also need to band together to
ensure that no one is taking more than their allotment, and sanction those who have illegal wells.
But Mundaca thinks the root of the problem need to be addressed: Chile needs to "have a deeper
discussion about renationalizing the country's water, about enshrining water access as an essential,
unalienable human right in the constitution."
As Mundaca tries to start that debate over the right way to distribute water in Chile, climate change
combined with global avocado demand may push the Ligua region to suffer from further water shortages.
Date 27.03.2014
Author Eilís O’Neill, Santiago / jlw