This
article fails to point out that the US Congress has passed
legislation to impose economic sanctions on Venezuela. See -
Venezuela leader praises US rejection of sanctions
Caracas
Goes Thirsty as Taps Run Dry and Bottles Vanish
Residents of the Venezuelan capital of Caracas, who already struggle to find toilet paper and deodorant, are facing a new shortage -- drinking water.
31
May, 2014
The
rationing of tap water amid a drought and a shortage of bottles
because of currency controls are forcing people to form long lines at
grocery stores and bottle shops as soon as deliveries are made. Truck
drivers spend much of their day outside water dispatch centers as
they try to meet demand.
“I
used to have to wait an hour to refill the truck, but now I have to
wait six,” said Carlos Miliani from his truck outside the Alpina
dispatch center in eastern Caracas. “More trucks are lining up here
because of the shortage of plastic containers and the fact that
plants that bottle mineral water have shut down.”
Miliani,
who was waiting behind 15 trucks at 11 a.m. to fill up with 5-gallon
(19-liter) jugs, said that a government-mandated water rationing plan
in Caracas and hot weather are fueling demand as supply shrinks.
“I
haven’t been able to find 5-liter bottles of water in the
supermarket for the past two weeks, and there haven’t been
half-liter bottles this week,” Maria Hernandez, a 36-year-old
secretary, said in an interview in Caracas today. “I have four at
home, but I’m afraid that they’ll run out and that I won’t be
able to find more. They ration water at my house on Wednesdays.”
Rationing
State
water utility Hidrocapital this month started rationing water in the
capital. Some areas of the city receive water service only three days
a week, with most neighborhoods going without water at least one day
a week. When water does flow, few residents dare to drink it because
of contamination.
It
costs 30 bolivars ($4.80 at the official exchange rate) for a
five-gallon jug of filtered water that comes in a reusable plastic
container.
“With
the rationing and the heat, the people that used to buy one jug now
want two,” Miliani said. “I’ll only sell them a new jug if they
return an empty one. I’ve got 12 broken ones that I can’t replace
because of the shortage of plastic containers.”
No Bottles
Regulated
prices for bottled water have not been raised since November 2011,
industry association Anber said in a May 19 statement. Since then,
consumer prices have risen 110 percent, according to central bank
data, while the bolivar has lost 87 percent of its value on the black
market, according to dolartoday.com, a website that tracks the value
on the Colombian border.
“Production
costs have risen with labor and transport,” Anber said. “The cost
of producing and distributing bottled water has more than doubled in
the past two and a half years.”
Economy
Vice President Rafael Ramirez said today that the government is
working to restore the supply of containers and that the currency
board had approved dollar payments to small companies in priority
sectors.
“There
is a problem with the supply of plastic used to make the bottle caps,
so we’re bringing it in ourselves,” Ramirez told reporters in
Caracas. “Mineral water is a government issue, as companies need
permission to bottle it. If they leave us without water, we’ll look
into it.”
Inflation Spiral
Annual
inflation in Venezuela hit
59 percent in March after the government carried out the biggest
devaluation since currency controls were instituted in 2003. The
central bank hasn’t provided data on product scarcity since
January, when it said 28 percent of basic goods were out of stock at
any given time.
Shortages
of everything from car parts to flour have spurred almost four months
of protests against the government of President Nicolas Maduro,
leaving 42 people dead.
“I
have to pay for repairs that are much more expensive now every time
that I have to do maintenance on the truck,” Miliani said. “I
have to increase the salaries for the five employees that I have.
Water may start free, but the price of everything else goes up.
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