Tren Maya: Difference between revisions

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== Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System ==
== Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System ==
= Indigenous Communities =


= Military Collaboration =
= Military Collaboration =

Revision as of 20:35, 5 August 2023

History

Environmental Impact

Intensive land development in the "Riviera Maya" region of the Yucatan Peninsula has led to increased contamination of groundwater systems that eventually discharge into Caribbean coastal ecosystems. The increased land development is largely attributed to the tourist industry.[1] The train project will increase the chances of water contamination adding to already increased levels of pollutants.

Among the environmental impacts that the Mayan Train could cause include deforestation, noise pollution and the affectation of water reserves. The construction of the Mayan Train could result in the felling of 2.500 hectares of humid and dry forests, representing approximately 8 million 736 thousand trees. Mexico occupies one of the first places in deforestation worldwide, noise pollution can have an impact on ecosystems and the fauna that inhabits them, affecting the ability of animals to listen to their predators and causing interference in their mating. The Yucatan Peninsula region is an important water reserve, especially of underground origin, which increases concern.[2]


Tram Five

The construction of the train threatens one of the longest underground rivers in the world, the Sac Aktun cave system, by potentially causing cave collapses and contamination from steel piles and diesel.[3]

Beyond the environmental impacts the construction of the train system in this area will likely cause destruction to ancient Mayan archeological sites.

Tram Six

Maya Forests

Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System

Indigenous Communities

Military Collaboration

In April of 2023 Mexico's Chamber of Deputies passed legislation giving control over the construction of the Tren Maya to the Defense Ministry (Sedena.)[4]

Deputy Julieta Mejía, of the Citizens Movement (MC) party, opposed the reforms because it gives the military further control over public works projects.

“We cannot turn Sedena into the builder of Mexico,” she said. “They are going to give the armed forces total and indefinite control of the infrastructure projects in our country.”

Under President López Obrador, the military’s participation in public works and infrastructure projects has broadened. On Friday, the Lower House approved a reform to the Civil Aviation and Airport laws that allows the formation of a state-owned airline operated by Sedena. This followed another reform passed in February giving the military control over Mexican airspace.

Sedena will also oversee the construction of six hotels near the Maya Train route through the state-owned company Olmeca-Maya-México.[5]

Resistance to Construction

Sources

  1. Chris D. Metcalfe, Patricia A. Beddows, Gerardo Gold Bouchot, Tracy L. Metcalfe, Hongxia Li, Hanneke Van Lavieren, Contaminants in the coastal karst aquifer system along the Caribbean coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, Environmental Pollution, Volume 159, Issue 4, 2011, Pages 991-997, ISSN 0269-7491, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2010.11.031.
  2. https://latinamericanpost.com/43441-mayan-train-overshadowed-by-environmental-damage-and-impact-on-communities
  3. https://www.uw360.asia/the-destruction-of-sac-aktun-underwater-cave-by-the-tren-maya-project/
  4. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/deputies-approve-defense-ministry-control-of-the-maya-train/
  5. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/deputies-approve-defense-ministry-control-of-the-maya-train/