Panoramic: Automotive and Mobility 2025
The Federal Executive has published in the Federal Official Gazette the Decree enacting the General Water Law (“LGA”) and simultaneously reforming and repealing various provisions of the National Water Law (“LAN”).
The new Law fundamentally reshapes Mexico’s water governance model: it creates the National Water Public Registry (“REPNA”) to replace the Public Water Rights Registry; redefines the rules applicable to water concessions, extensions, transfers, and reallocations; and establishes a National Water Reserve Fund to redirect volumes to priority uses.
The Decree introduces specific regulation for rainwater harvesting, strengthens the regulatory framework for wastewater reuse, and creates a significantly more robust administrative and criminal sanctioning regime, including new categories of water-related offenses.
At its core, the General Water Law is built around the human right to water and sanitation, the State’s authority over water management, and basin-based planning, representing a structural shift for all productive sectors in Mexico.
On December 11, 2025, the Federal Official Gazette published the “Decree enacting the General Water Law and reforming, repealing, and amending various provisions of the National Water Law” (“Decree”).
The Decree responds to Mexico's long-standing water crisis, characterized by aquifer over-exploitation, increasing pollution, unequal access, insufficient wastewater treatment, and an outdated regulatory framework that no longer fulfills the constitutional mandate to guarantee the human right to water.
The reform emphasizes that the LAN was built on a patrimonial and market-driven model centered on concessions and transfers of “rights,” whereas the new LGA seeks to reorient the entire system around State stewardship, equity, sustainability, and water justice, establishing the foundation for a new governance model based on basin management.
The Decree eliminates the Public Water Rights Registry and replaces it with the National Water Registry, a centralized system for all concessions, assignments, discharge permits, modifications, and compliance information.
The Decree introduces specific regulation for rainwater harvesting, promoting urban, industrial, and domestic systems as mechanisms to relieve pressure on basins and aquifers. Industrial or commercial rainwater capture now requires prior authorization.
The Decree promotes a model in which treated wastewater reuse becomes mandatory in certain sectors and is encouraged through efficiency-based criteria.
The new framework significantly strengthens enforcement powers:
The LGA aims to:
The LGA stands as the central instrument guiding Mexico’s transition toward a more equitable and sustainability-driven water management model.
Authored by Mauricio Llamas, Mauricio Villegas, Sofia de Llano, and José Pablo Navarro.
Following the publication of the General Water Law, concession holders should promptly review the status of their existing titles and permits particularly those approaching expiration, and prepare extension requests in advance (within the last year of validity and at least six months before termination). It is also advisable to assess potential caducity risks related to unused volumes and maintain documentation supporting any periods of inactivity.
Given the strengthened oversight framework, companies should reinforce measurement systems, reporting practices, and fiscal compliance, while anticipating the impact of the prohibition on transfers and the possible use of reallocations. Industrial users should evaluate whether upgrades to treatment and reuse infrastructure are required under the new obligations. Finally, monitoring the regulations to be issued over the next 180 days will be essential, as these rules will define the operational procedures under the new water regime.