Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature

Páramo is a term imported from Spain to the northern Andes to refer to uninhabited, barren, mountainous areas. This notion has, in more recent times, acquired new meanings. Today, the páramo is known as a high mountain tropical ecosystem of strategic importance to carbon storage, water provision,...

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Main Authors: Santiago Martínez Medina, Hanne Cottyn, Ana María Garrido, Joshua Kirshner, Rory O’Bryen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Water Alternatives Association 2024-02-01
Series:Water Alternatives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol17/v17issue1/741-a17-1-8/file
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author Santiago Martínez Medina
Hanne Cottyn
Ana María Garrido
Joshua Kirshner
Rory O’Bryen
author_facet Santiago Martínez Medina
Hanne Cottyn
Ana María Garrido
Joshua Kirshner
Rory O’Bryen
author_sort Santiago Martínez Medina
collection DOAJ
description Páramo is a term imported from Spain to the northern Andes to refer to uninhabited, barren, mountainous areas. This notion has, in more recent times, acquired new meanings. Today, the páramo is known as a high mountain tropical ecosystem of strategic importance to carbon storage, water provision, and biodiversity. In Colombia, the páramos located around Bogotá have been central in the emergence and consolidation of conceptualisations of the páramo as a strategic ecosystem. In close relation to their importance for the country’s first large-scale water infrastructures to supply urbanizing populations, they are today imagined as fábricas de agua, or 'water factories'. In this article, we propose the notion of 'double support' to capture the coordinated work between water intake from the páramo and environmental conservation of the páramo as a situated articulation of the concept of 'infrastructural nature'. We trace the emergence of the páramo as infrastructural nature through two partly overlapping trajectories of what we define as 'infrastructuralisation', the first driven by the work of water engineers, the second materialising in the work of natural scientists. While these trajectories do not exhaust the complex historical process that gives rise to the 'páramo as we know it today', they do allow us to grasp contemporary understandings of the páramo as a 'marriage of convenience', whose stability should not be taken for granted.
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spelling doaj.art-9e0f49c2484849ac983e8382f522578a2024-03-14T08:55:59ZengWater Alternatives AssociationWater Alternatives1965-01752024-02-01171167186Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural natureSantiago Martínez Medina0Hanne Cottyn1Ana María Garrido2Joshua Kirshner3Rory O’Bryen4Universidad el Bosque, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, ColombiaGhent UniversityUniversity of FloridaUniversity of YorkUniversity of CambridgePáramo is a term imported from Spain to the northern Andes to refer to uninhabited, barren, mountainous areas. This notion has, in more recent times, acquired new meanings. Today, the páramo is known as a high mountain tropical ecosystem of strategic importance to carbon storage, water provision, and biodiversity. In Colombia, the páramos located around Bogotá have been central in the emergence and consolidation of conceptualisations of the páramo as a strategic ecosystem. In close relation to their importance for the country’s first large-scale water infrastructures to supply urbanizing populations, they are today imagined as fábricas de agua, or 'water factories'. In this article, we propose the notion of 'double support' to capture the coordinated work between water intake from the páramo and environmental conservation of the páramo as a situated articulation of the concept of 'infrastructural nature'. We trace the emergence of the páramo as infrastructural nature through two partly overlapping trajectories of what we define as 'infrastructuralisation', the first driven by the work of water engineers, the second materialising in the work of natural scientists. While these trajectories do not exhaust the complex historical process that gives rise to the 'páramo as we know it today', they do allow us to grasp contemporary understandings of the páramo as a 'marriage of convenience', whose stability should not be taken for granted. https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol17/v17issue1/741-a17-1-8/file: páramoinfrastructurewaternature conservationcolombia
spellingShingle Santiago Martínez Medina
Hanne Cottyn
Ana María Garrido
Joshua Kirshner
Rory O’Bryen
Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
Water Alternatives
: páramo
infrastructure
water
nature conservation
colombia
title Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
title_full Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
title_fullStr Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
title_full_unstemmed Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
title_short Water factories of the high Colombian mountains: Páramo as 'infrastructural nature
title_sort water factories of the high colombian mountains paramo as infrastructural nature
topic : páramo
infrastructure
water
nature conservation
colombia
url https://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol17/v17issue1/741-a17-1-8/file
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