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Mexico Just Agreed to Send Water Back to Texas Farmers—202,000 Acre

Larrison Manygoats by Larrison Manygoats
December 17, 2025
in Top News
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Mexico Just Agreed to Send Water Back to Texas Farmers—202,000 Acre
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On December 12, the United States and Mexico reached a deal that’s going to change everything for farmers and ranchers across South Texas.

Mexico agreed to release 202,000 acre-feet of water to American farmers. Deliveries start the week of December 15. That’s real water flowing back to the Rio Grande Valley after years of devastating shortages.

This isn’t small. This is transformational for South Texas agriculture.

What This Actually Means for Farmers

For years, South Texas farmers have been dying on the vine—literally. Mexico was supposed to deliver 1.75 million acre-feet of water over five years under a treaty signed in 1944. They didn’t. They fell short. Badly.

Crops dried up. Ranchers couldn’t water cattle. Entire operations went under. Farmers watched their livelihoods evaporate while Mexico kept the water flowing south instead of north across the Rio Grande.

This agreement changes that. Starting next week, 202,000 acre-feet of water flows to Texas. That’s water for irrigation. That’s water for cattle. That’s water that keeps farms alive.

How We Got Here

This didn’t happen by accident. The Trump administration put pressure on Mexico—real pressure. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins and Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau negotiated directly. They made it clear: honor the treaty or face consequences.

The message was unmistakable: if Mexico doesn’t comply, the United States will impose 5% tariffs on Mexican products. That’s leverage that actually works.

Mexico listened. And they delivered. In the past year alone, Mexico has sent more water than they did in the previous four years combined. This agreement formalizes that commitment going forward.

The Bigger Picture: Texas Agriculture Survives

The Rio Grande Valley isn’t just farms. It’s a $5 billion agricultural economy. When water runs out, jobs disappear. When farmers go bankrupt, entire communities struggle. Schools lose funding. Businesses close.

This water agreement keeps that from happening. It gives South Texas farmers certainty for the upcoming crop season. It means they can plan. They can invest. They can hire workers. They can stay in business.

For a region that’s been economically devastated by water shortages, this is a lifeline.

What Happens Next

Mexico agreed to release 202,000 acre-feet starting December 15. But that’s just the beginning.

The two countries are negotiating a full plan to address the water deficit from the previous cycle—the years when Mexico fell short on their obligations. That negotiation wraps up by January 31, 2026.

If Mexico stays compliant, water keeps flowing. Farmers get predictability. The Rio Grande Valley stabilizes.

If Mexico doesn’t comply? The United States reserves the right to impose tariffs and take other action. The treaty is enforceable.

Why This Matters Beyond Texas

This is about international agreements actually meaning something. For decades, Mexico ignored the 1944 Water Treaty. American farmers suffered while Mexico prioritized their own agriculture.

Now, a president is saying: that stops. Honor your commitments or face economic consequences.

That sets a precedent. It tells international partners that America won’t accept violations of treaties. It protects American workers and farmers. It reestablishes respect for agreements.

The Real Impact for Farmers

If you’re a Rio Grande Valley farmer, you can finally breathe. You know water is coming. You know the treaty is being enforced. You can make plans for next year without wondering if your crops will survive.

That’s not dramatic policy. That’s survival.

For ranchers, it means watering cattle without rationing. For crop farmers, it means irrigation instead of watching fields wither. For the local economy, it means jobs and business activity.

One water agreement just saved South Texas agriculture.

Timeline:

  • December 15, 2025 – Water deliveries begin (202,000 acre-feet)
  • January 31, 2026 – Full deficit repayment plan finalized
  • Ongoing – Mexico must comply or face 5% tariffs

The Deal: Mexico releases 202,000 acre-feet | U.S. receives water from Rio Grande | Mexico gets water from Colorado River | Both countries enforce the 1944 Water Treaty

Larrison Manygoats

Larrison Manygoats

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