Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - INTERNATIONAL BUREAUS, CONGRESSES, ETC. › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY AND WATER COMMISSION › § 277d–44
The Commission must arrange for secondary sewage treatment in Mexico for up to 50 million gallons per day (mgd) of wastewater—covering effluent from the International Wastewater Treatment Plant (if not treated in the U.S.) and other sewage from the Tijuana River area. The Commission may add up to 25 mgd more if a required plan shows the region needs it. The Administrator must write a comprehensive plan with local stakeholders within 24 months after November 7, 2000. That plan must analyze long-term secondary treatment needs, needed upgrades to Tijuana’s sewer collection system, and options with recommended choices for extra treatment capacity for flows from the Tijuana River area. The Commission may enter a fee-for-service contract, up to 20 years, with the owner of a Mexican treatment facility to provide the required treatment, subject to available funding and these minimum terms: move advanced primary effluent from the IWTP to the Mexican plant; treat it to secondary level meeting U.S., California, and Mexican standards; return any treated water that cannot be reused to the South Bay Ocean Outfall for ocean discharge under U.S. and California rules; provide extra capacity for Tijuana sewage; set up monitoring, verification, and enforcement; handle sludge disposal in Mexico; require the Mexican owner to keep a 20% equity stake; set annual payments to cover agreed development, financing, construction, operation, maintenance, and allowable insurance costs (which may be amortized); make the U.S. not responsible for cancellation fees; allow the owner to buy private cancellation insurance (not guaranteed by the U.S.); transfer the facility to an appropriate non‑U.S. government if the contract is canceled or the owner fails; use competitive procurement by the owner with Commission review of contractor choices; keep records and allow the Department of State Inspector General to audit them; and allow payment offsets for any revenue from selling treated water. The State Department Inspector General must monitor the contract and report to Congress 2 years after signing, again 3 years later, and periodically after that.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 277d–44
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73