The Brief
- Water shortages are hitting crisis levels across South Texas, forcing cities like Aransas Pass and Beeville to declare local disasters as reservoir levels plummet.
- Corpus Christi faces a potential emergency by November 2026, while smaller towns warn that water levels may soon drop below the reach of their intake pipes.
- State intervention remains a possibility as Governor Abbott pressures local leaders to accelerate a $1 billion water strategy involving desalination and new pipelines.
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – A worsening drought and mounting demand are straining water supplies across South Texas, prompting multiple cities to declare disasters and raising concerns about the stability of a regional system anchored by Corpus Christi.
Disaster declarations in South Texas
Strong winds blow sand across the beach as a kite surfer rides and a couple plays in the heavy surf. South Padre Island, Texas. (Photo by: Jon G. Fuller/VW Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
What we know:
Corpus Christi supplies water to municipal and industrial users across a seven-county region, including several surrounding cities, according to the city’s water department.…