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鈥極ur legacy of development鈥: Obrador鈥檚 Maya Train weakens rare cave ecosystems

President聽L贸pez Obrador鈥檚聽Maya Train initiative aims to connect tourist hubs to rural areas across Mexico. But underground, drills and new construction threaten a network of caverns and aquifers聽as the nation聽faces a deepening water crisis.

By Teresa De Miguel, Megan Janetsky, and Rodrigo Abd , Associated Press
Aktun Tuyul Cave System, Mexico

Mexico鈥檚 outgoing leader has rapidly built a train system looping around the country鈥檚 southern Yucatan Peninsula.

President Andr茅s Manuel L贸pez Obrador promised the more than $30 billion Maya Train project would connect tourist hubs like Canc煤n and Playa del Carmen to dense jungle and remote archaeological sites, drawing money into long-neglected rural swathes of the country.

But the crown jewel of the populist鈥檚 presidency also runs over one of Mexico鈥檚 natural wonders: A fragile system of an estimated 10,000 subterranean caverns, rivers, lakes, and freshwater sinkholes.

As his term comes to an end, Associated Press journalists traveled along a section of that cave network, documenting its destruction.

Built upon a fragile and important ecosystem

The cave system contains one of the biggest aquifers in Mexico and acts as the region鈥檚 main water source, crucial at a time when the nation faces a deepening water crisis.

The region was once a reef nestled beneath the Caribbean Sea, but changing sea levels pushed Mexico鈥檚 southern peninsula out of the ocean as a mass of limestone. Water sculpted the porous stone into caves over the course of millions of years.

It produced the open-face freshwater caverns known as cenotes and underground rivers that are in equal parts awe-inspiring and delicate, explained Emiliano Monroy-R铆os, a geologist at Northwestern University studying the region.

鈥淭hese ecosystems are very, very fragile,鈥 Mr. Monroy-R铆os said. 鈥淭hey are building upon a land that is like gruyere cheese, full of caves and cavities of different sizes and at different depths.鈥

The destruction

The train has sparked criticism by environmentalists and scientists as its construction plowed down millions of trees, a chunk of the largest tropical forest in the Americas after the Amazon.

But the caves rose to the forefront in recent months when experts who have long worked in the caves posted videos of government workers using massive metal drills to bore into the limestone, embedding an estimated 15,000 steel pillars into the caverns.

The pillars were made to elevate the train line, something Mr. L贸pez Obrador said would protect the ancient underground world, already under threat by mass tourism.

Instead, what the AP documented was destruction.

Across the cave system, stalactites broken off by vibrations from train construction litter the ground like rubble following an earthquake. In other caverns, the concrete filling the pillars has spilled out to coat the limestone ground. Water showed traces of iron pollution by rust coming from the metal.

The destruction ripples out to the rest of the ecosystem, the AP found, as the fresh water aquifer connects to the Caribbean Sea.

A political promise, but also a political process

Mr. L贸pez Obrador, who has portrayed himself as a champion of Mexico鈥檚 long-forgotten poor, has declared the train 鈥渙ur legacy of development for the southeast of Mexico.鈥

The populist has fast-tracked construction of the train to try to keep promises to complete it before Mexico's June 2 elections, something that appears all but impossible.

The government has dodged oversight, ignored court orders, employed the Mexican military in its construction, and blocked the release of information in the name of 鈥渘atural security.鈥 In a violation of Mexican law, the administration also didn鈥檛 carry out a comprehensive study to assess the potential environmental impacts before starting construction.

The moves Mr. L贸pez Obrador has made have only deepened his ongoing clashes with the country鈥檚 judiciary, further fueling criticisms that his government is undermining democratic institutions.

This story was reported by The Associated Press.