Water and Watershed Protection
The priority actions set forth in this section highlight four key areas of increased focus that will ensure we are working toward access to clean water for all our communities and prevent certain sources of freshwater from becoming polluted or degraded sacrifice zones. Future generations of New Mexicans and our vibrant agricultural and outdoor recreation sectors depend on New Mexico to protect and restore water quality. As drought intensifies and new water pollutants emerge, we must simultaneously cleanup legacy waste and put strong programs in place to protect healthy watersheds and pristine aquifers through pollution prevention, forestland restoration, and fixing aging infrastructure.
C1

Clean up contaminated groundwater sites
C2

Protect surface water by controlling pollution through a discharge permitting program
C3

Modernize wastewater treatment plants and storm water infrastructure
C4
Protect and restore watersheds
C1: Clean up contaminated groundwater sites
Clean up contaminated groundwater across 15 Superfund sites, hundreds of legacy uranium mining and milling sites, federal facilities (such as Los Alamos National Lab and military institutions), hundreds of petroleum storage tank releases, and up to 200 other pollutant plumes scattered across rural and urban communities where groundwater fails to meet State water quality standards.
C1: The ROI Goal
By 2035, average federal and private sector investments in legacy uranium cleanup in New Mexico are 500% of 2023 levels; 30 non-uranium groundwater contamination sites are remediated, of which at least 50% are located in underserved or disadvantaged communities; there are zero active petroleum storage tank sites with human health risk; and all active Superfund sites are on schedule with an approved and funded remediation plan.
C1: Progress
Projects Underway
$0
Spent
$1,783,339
Remaining
$1,419,536
Encumbered
total
Schmitt Decline Mine
$0
Spent
$1,113,970
Remaining
$1,200,000
Planned Total
(still estimating)
Red Bluff No. 1 Mine
$0
Spent
$3,763,720
Remaining
$4,000,000
Encumbered
total
Moe No. 4 Mine
Did you know?
There are over 348 contaminated sites in New Mexico without a responsible party.
- 302 neglected contaminated sites plus an unknown number of former dry cleaner sites
- 46 neglected abandoned uranium mine sites
View a Detailed Map of Formerly Operating Uranium Mine and Mill Sites in New Mexico








