Highlights

  • Bogota faces severe drought, water rations
  • 24-hour water cuts every ten days
  • Intense dry spell aggravated by El Nino

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Fewer showers, less laundry, as water cuts hit Colombian capital

Some 10 million people are being impacted by new restrictions that impose 24-hour water cuts every ten days.

Fewer showers, less laundry, as water cuts hit Colombian capital

Residents of Bogota are facing fewer showers, minimal laundry loads and dirty cars as the Colombian capital imposes water rations due to a severe drought aggravated by the El Nino climate phenomenon.

Bogota has become the latest major city around the world to face a water crisis in recent years due to intense dry spells and President Gustavo Petro vowed Thursday to boost investment to protect the valuable resource.

Some 10 million people in the Colombian capital and surrounds are being impacted by new restrictions that impose 24-hour water cuts every ten days by sector.

"The situation is critical," said Mayor Carlos Fernando Galan.

In the mountainous suburb La Calera in the sprawling Andean city, residents have already suffered occasional cuts since February, often resorting to tanker trucks that wind through the steep streets to deliver drinking water.

"There are things we can no longer do, like washing the car," said Clara Escobar, 36, a graphic designer who came to fill two buckets from the tanker.

"We shower less" and "we wash the clothes (only) when necessary."

Dams lowest in decades

A lack of rain and unusual heat has seen Colombia's reservoirs dry up at an alarming rate.

The Chingaza paramo -- an alpine wetland system rich in glacial lakes -- provides some 70 percent of Bogota's drinking water, and its dams are at their lowest level since 1980.

Environment Minister Susana Muhamad said significant rains were only expected at the end of April or early May.

Colombia is blessed with abundant freshwater sources.

Nevertheless, millions lack access to clean water as a result of severe water pollution, deforestation, and agriculture.

'Substantial change'

In a lengthy post on X, President Gustavo Petro said he had ordered "a substantial change" to ensure that in the next 30 years, the entire population has clean water.

"There will be droughts worse than the one we are facing," he said, adding that Bogota residents could now judge whether "unhindered urbanization" was sustainable.

He said half of the country's water supply depends on its moors, jungles and Andean forests "that have already been pillaged by 80 percent for agriculture or mining for construction."

Petro said the country had long prioritized urbanization at the expense of the "serious financing of adaptation to climate change."

He said at current investment levels it would take a century to provide clean drinking water and proper sanitation to the 17 million people who currently do not have it.

Petro added that providing these people with drinking water would cost $26 billion.

"That is absurdly irrational in the midst of a climate crisis that will worsen due to the growing consumption of coal and oil in rich northern societies."

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