Legislation - Policy

New Mexico official: Texans are ‘stealing’ water and selling it back for fracking

After you head northeast on Ranch Road 652 from tiny Orla, it’s easy to miss the precise moment you leave Texas and cross into New Mexico. The sign just says “Lea County Line,” and with 254 counties in Texas, you’d be forgiven for not knowing there isn’t one named Lea.

But the folks who are selling water over it know exactly where the line is. That’s because on the Texas side, where the “rule of capture” rules groundwater policy, people basically can pump water from beneath their land to their heart’s content. But on the New Mexico side, the state has imposed tight regulations on both surface and groundwater that restrict supply.

Here’s the rub — or the opportunity, depending on your perspective: With an oil fracking boom driving demand for freshwater on both sides of the state line in these parts, Texas landowners are helping to fill the void with water from the Lone Star State — including from at least one county in which Gov. Greg Abbott has declared a drought. […]

More about New Mexico, Texas:

New Mexico communities struggle to deliver water free of uranium

In water-scarce Southwest, ancient irrigation system disrupts big agriculture

Why are Texas’ smaller utilities not cleaning up drinking water?

Radium contamination in water most widespread in Texas, environmental group says

Meet the visionary who restored 5,500 acres of wrecked Texas land to paradise

Summary
Article Name
New Mexico official: Texans are 'stealing' water and selling it back for fracking
Description
Oil fracking needs freshwater. New Mexico landowners help with water from Texas, incl. at least one county in which Gov. Greg Abbott has declared a drought.
Author
Publisher Name
Star-Telegram
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