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Planning for Water Scarcity: The Vulnerability of the Laguna Region, Mexico

This dissertation examined declining groundwater availability and management
strategies for addressing water shortages in the Laguna region located in the states of
Coahuila and Durango. Excessive pumping of groundwater in the Laguna region has
resulted in a dramatic decline in the water level of the aquifer and in the region's water
supply. Since agriculture has been highly dependent on groundwater, this may lead
dramatic changes in the agricultural sector of the regional economy. This research was
an exploratory investigation of water users' beliefs and of options regarding water
scarcity that could help design a stakeholder framework for planning the region's water
resources. To address this problem, a combination of quantitative and qualitative
techniques were used. A systems theory simulation model was used to measure the
economic vulnerability of the main agricultural products at different scenarios of water
volume in the aquifer. Grounded theory methodology was used to address water users'
beliefs concerning water conditions and planning strategies. Preference and feasibility
analysis was used to identify the most preferable planning strategies among water
stakeholders. Statistical analyses were used to support the results of the quantitative
assessments.
The results of the simulation model showed a significant impact on economic
production given different scenarios of water volume and of higher probabilities of
droughts. From the qualitative assessment four main findings were identified: lack of localized data, cognitive communication dissonance, disagreement on problem
identification and disagreement on possible solutions. From the preference and
feasibility analysis, the most favored strategies were: more comprehensive research,
conservation campaigns, education and investment for water efficiency techniques. The
lowest values were gained by privatization, new drillings, decentralization, construction
of new dams, and the continuation of the actual pumping condition. Results showed
there was no preference for dramatic changes in the actual model of water use. The
vulnerability of the region was not shown to be equal among users; it was higher for
communal users and cities, and lesser for private farmers and industries. The potential
for sustainability was not high enough to expect a significant change in the near future in
the water planning process.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-6991
Date2009 August 1900
CreatorsSanchez Flores, Maria Del Rosario
ContributorsKaiser, Ronald A., Giardino, John R.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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