Nearly 70% of water for Chile's large-scale mining to come from sea by 2034

A Cochilco study projects seawater will account for 68% of water use in Chile's large-scale copper mining by 2034, up from 41% in 2024. Total water demand will rise from 18.5 m³/s to 20.6 m³/s, as continental water use falls.

Chile's Copper Commission (Cochilco) released the study 'Projection of water demand in copper mining in Chile' for 2025-2034. The report forecasts water demand growing at an average annual rate of 1%, matching expected copper production rises, existing operation expansions, and new projects. In 2024, total consumption stood at 18.5 m³/s, with 41% seawater and 10.9 m³/s continental water; by 2034, it will reach 20.6 m³/s, with 68% seawater and 6.7 m³/s continental, due to structural water scarcity in mining areas. Growth will not be steady: increases from 2025-2027, a dip in 2028-2030, and rises again from 2031 due to shifts to sulfide minerals requiring more water. The 2026-2027 period is a milestone with projects like Collahuasi's C20+, Codelco's Northern District plant, and Aconcagua. Antofagasta Region will account for 49% of national consumption by 2034, with Tarapacá, Antofagasta, and Atacama leading seawater uptake. Patricia Gamboa, Cochilco's director of studies and public policies, stated: 'Investments are becoming increasingly viable from a strategic perspective, though costs remain significantly higher than continental water supply due to infrastructure complexity.' Costs average US$4.45/m³ for desalination and pumping, US$1.87/m³ for direct pumping, with energy pivotal. Environmentally, it eases continental pressure but poses risks in marine intake, brine discharge, and energy footprint, urging integrated territorial planning.

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US and Mexican diplomats shaking hands over 1944 Water Treaty map by the flowing Rio Grande, symbolizing resolved water delivery dispute.
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Mexico and US agree on water delivery under 1944 treaty

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Mexico and the United States reached an agreement on December 13, 2025, for the delivery of 249.163 million cubic meters of Rio Grande water, starting next week, following tensions over the 1944 Water Treaty. The deal averts a 5% tariff threat from Donald Trump and addresses the previous water deficit. Mexico maintains it complies with the treaty despite drought in the northern border region.

A Criteria study for Andess shows 57% of Chileans drink tap water directly, up from 37% two years ago, with growing confidence in its quality. Citizens have adopted water-saving habits like closing taps while brushing teeth and shortening showers. Challenges now focus on water treatment and sanitation systems.

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Around 40 million of the Philippines' 115 million population lack access to reliable water supply, according to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR). DENR Undersecretary Carlos Primo David stated that climate change or pollution could compromise water sources for millions. DENR chief Juan Miguel Cuna highlighted the challenge of water bankruptcy facing the country.

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The Playas reservoir has reached 110.5% of its capacity, starting spills of 2.0 GWh and becoming the third in this condition. The Superintendencia de Servicios Públicos Domiciliarios reports three reservoirs in simultaneous overcapacity: Playas, Ituango, and Urrá I. Topocoro, at 96.2% fill, may soon join due to the high flow of the Sogamoso River.

Chile holds nearly 40% of the world's astronomical observation capacity, which could exceed 60% early next decade with telescopes like the Giant Magellan Telescope. Óscar Contreras-Villarroel, vice president and Chile representative for the project, stresses protecting dark skies and installation sites through consistent regulations.

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The Superintendencia de Servicios Públicos Domiciliarios reported that the Ituango reservoir recorded two consecutive days at a 98.8% fill level, below 100%, with discharges of just 6.34 GWh. This trend points toward the definitive cessation of discharges amid low Cauca river flows. Other reservoirs in the National Interconnected System show mixed variations.

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