The Prague Post - High in the Andes, Lake Titicaca's water levels fall to historic lows

EUR -
AED 4.29763
AFN 73.724064
ALL 95.431377
AMD 434.627922
ANG 2.094559
AOA 1074.262038
ARS 1643.874137
AUD 1.634032
AWG 2.107859
AZN 1.984963
BAM 1.956879
BBD 2.356479
BDT 143.878113
BGN 1.952047
BHD 0.441577
BIF 3481.405466
BMD 1.17022
BND 1.493911
BOB 8.084424
BRL 5.823839
BSD 1.169935
BTN 110.55302
BWP 15.823591
BYN 3.300992
BYR 22936.318367
BZD 2.353088
CAD 1.601862
CDF 2717.84236
CHF 0.923775
CLF 0.026511
CLP 1043.391257
CNY 8.001323
CNH 8.001048
COP 4229.913493
CRC 532.188931
CUC 1.17022
CUP 31.010839
CVE 110.470778
CZK 24.360418
DJF 207.971501
DKK 7.47363
DOP 69.335679
DZD 155.10686
EGP 61.84563
ERN 17.553305
ETB 184.163444
FJD 2.574838
FKP 0.863581
GBP 0.866495
GEL 3.153717
GGP 0.863581
GHS 13.036213
GIP 0.863581
GMD 86.01005
GNF 10271.657198
GTQ 8.938853
GYD 244.774983
HKD 9.170671
HNL 31.151616
HRK 7.53376
HTG 153.263208
HUF 364.107615
IDR 20272.136264
ILS 3.465063
IMP 0.863581
INR 110.912839
IQD 1532.988626
IRR 1540009.947262
ISK 143.200095
JEP 0.863581
JMD 184.341656
JOD 0.829712
JPY 186.878922
KES 151.133946
KGS 102.311893
KHR 4692.584034
KMF 492.663287
KPW 1053.193392
KRW 1729.357442
KWD 0.36019
KYD 0.975029
KZT 536.281153
LAK 25680.484902
LBP 104783.164694
LKR 372.932469
LRD 215.027493
LSL 19.349565
LTL 3.455356
LVL 0.707855
LYD 7.425053
MAD 10.831852
MDL 20.234986
MGA 4855.243698
MKD 61.631857
MMK 2457.508725
MNT 4208.527688
MOP 9.443968
MRU 46.808827
MUR 54.801195
MVR 18.079995
MWK 2037.353617
MXN 20.360955
MYR 4.624705
MZN 74.788524
NAD 19.366914
NGN 1609.006392
NIO 42.964656
NOK 10.917969
NPR 176.885033
NZD 1.995407
OMR 0.449951
PAB 1.16994
PEN 4.11449
PGK 5.084314
PHP 72.071559
PKR 326.169716
PLN 4.249491
PYG 7333.981695
QAR 4.263406
RON 5.096544
RSD 117.350319
RUB 88.146058
RWF 1709.106784
SAR 4.38922
SBD 9.392113
SCR 16.538386
SDG 702.721016
SEK 10.857181
SGD 1.494564
SHP 0.873688
SLE 28.816696
SLL 24538.930615
SOS 668.783467
SRD 43.842276
STD 24221.198058
STN 24.867182
SVC 10.237558
SYP 129.367004
SZL 19.366762
THB 38.176053
TJS 10.974452
TMT 4.101622
TND 3.374623
TOP 2.81761
TRY 52.742114
TTD 7.955319
TWD 36.963769
TZS 3051.493403
UAH 51.560793
UGX 4352.362943
USD 1.17022
UYU 46.175069
UZS 14124.559215
VES 567.110495
VND 30831.209788
VUV 138.350004
WST 3.192142
XAF 656.313319
XAG 0.015878
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.162579
XCG 2.108545
XDR 0.816484
XOF 654.739339
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.272599
ZAR 19.365098
ZMK 10533.402627
ZMW 22.198146
ZWL 376.810467
  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.2

    -0.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    22.83

    -0.13%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5300

    63.47

    -0.84%

  • AZN

    -0.8300

    186.68

    -0.44%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    87.45

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    -1.2500

    82.61

    -1.51%

  • RIO

    -1.4600

    98.49

    -1.48%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.5

    -0.26%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    58.47

    +1.97%

  • GSK

    0.2500

    54.47

    +0.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • RELX

    -0.3800

    36.01

    -1.06%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    15.49

    -0.13%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    15.3

    -0.65%

  • BP

    0.3800

    46.35

    +0.82%

High in the Andes, Lake Titicaca's water levels fall to historic lows
High in the Andes, Lake Titicaca's water levels fall to historic lows / Photo: Aizar RALDES - AFP

High in the Andes, Lake Titicaca's water levels fall to historic lows

Pedro de la Cruz stands beside his stranded boat and supplicates his God, lifting his arms and praying anxiously for rain to replenish Lake Titicaca, the massive body of water at a breath-sapping altitude in the Andes on the border between Bolivia and Peru.

Text size:

"Dear God, make more rain come," the 74-year-old says, invoking Pachamama, Mother Earth for Indigenous people of the region. "Help us, please, we are parched here.... Make the rain showers come... Father in heaven, have pity."

De la Cruz, a former state employee, spoke in Aymara, his native language, as he surveyed what was once the shore of Lake Titicaca, some 45 miles (77 kilometers) west of the capital La Paz.

The waters of Lake Titicaca are within 10 inches (25 centimeters) of their all-time low, a record set in 1996, the chief forecaster for Bolivia's weather service (Senhami), Lucia Walper, tells AFP.

Along what was once the 700-mile shoreline of the lake, one now sees boats stranded on dry land and orphan docks stretched over nonexistent water.

Low levels mean that fish that ordinarily spawn near shore are now unable to, and that leads Edwin Katari, a 43-year-old fisherman, to mull a question.

"So where are the fish going to spawn?" Katari asks.

- Dark forecast –

Bolivia's Senhami has measured water levels of the lake since 1974.

At its highest point in 1986, water levels reached 12 feet higher than they are today, topping out at 12,504.2 feet (3,811 meters) above sea level. But in 1996, they had fallen to 12,491.4 feet above sea level.

Walper says falling water levels are "the result of climate change" and the outlook is not good.

"It is very probable that they keep falling until they hit even lower levels," she says.

A satellite survey still has not been made to see how much Lake Titicaca, which once had a surface area of 3,200 square miles (8,300 square kilometers), has shrunk.

It is the highest of the world's large lakes and is one of the largest in South America, after Venezuela's Lake Maracaibo (which is actually connected to the Caribbean Sea) and Brazil's Lagoa dos Patos, a coastal lagoon.

- La Nina and El Nino –

The level of Lake Titicaca "has been progressively decreasing due to many meteorological, hydrological and climatic factors," explains Walper, who emphasizes that "there is less rainfall."

"Over the years, each phenomenon, whether El Nino and/or La Nina, has been presenting a distortion in its parameters and factors," she points out, explaining the characteristics of these events -- associated with rains or droughts -- over time.

The rainfall and the inflow to the lake from Peruvian rivers "were not sufficient to generate the normal rises in times of rain," she says.

El Nino is a natural climatic event, generally associated with increased temperatures, drought in some parts of the world, and heavy rains in others. La Nina, on the other hand, causes the opposite effects, particularly a drop in temperatures.

Other stresses impact the lake. It is heavily polluted by waste from the city of El Alto, a metropolis of one million people in this landlocked country. Additionally, indiscriminate fishing has decimated species.

- Despair sets in –

Because the decline in water levels is linked to climate change, the solution "is a global issue," Walper adds.

The recent summit in Brazil of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) reaffirmed the call for industrialized countries to fulfill their promises of economic resources to finance actions against climate change.

But in the villages around Lake Titicaca, despair has set in that water levels will never return to normal in the world's highest navigable sea.

"If there is no water, if there is no rain, we will not be able to live," frets De la Cruz.

D.Kovar--TPP