/ Modified jul 16, 2019 11:13 a.m.

Sulfuric acid leak in Mexico’s Sea of Cortez a ‘wake-up call’

A researcher says the impact was minimal, but that it shows the need to consider the potential for a spill on a much larger scale.

Guaymas port hero The Port of Guaymas, Mexico.
Courtesy Port Authority of Guaymas

Mexico’s largest mining company, Grupo México, spilled about 3,000 liters of sulfuric acid into the Sea of Cortez on Tuesday.

The leak started around 3 p.m. when a valve connecting two hoses failed as ships were being loaded with the acid at the company’s facility in the Port of Guaymas.

“There were no injuries, no one was harmed,” said Port Director Abraham Larios, adding that Mexican environmental authorities were contacted immediately.

Grupo México said in a news release that employees closed the valves and started pumping the acid back in to tanks within minutes. But some of the acid had already flowed into the sea.

On Thursday morning, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said the incident is being investigated.

“The Environmental Ministry is attending the case to evaluate any damage, but it’s a fact that there was a spill,” he said.

Jaqueline Garcia, a researcher with the Center for Research on Food and Development (CIAD) in Guaymas, said the impacts of this spill were minimal. She said researchers found about 10 dead fish in the area, but pH levels in the water were normal.

She said she hopes the spill is it a “wake-up call” for Grupo México.

“This could happen in a major scale and we need to be prepared,” she said. “I think with the attention we have now with this spill, it’s a good call for Grupo México to pay attention.”

This week’s acid leak comes almost five years after the mining company was responsible for spilling 40,000 cubic meters of copper sulfate acid into Sonoran waterways in the Rio Sonora in August 2014. That spill is considered one of the worst environmental disasters in Mexican history. Local residents are still feeling the effects of the damage.

Fronteras Desk
This story is from the Fronteras Desk, a collaboration of Southwestern public radio stations, including NPR 89.1. Read more from the Fronteras Desk.
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