The Lake Titicaca, shared by Bolivia and Peru, is facing an unprecedented environmental crisis.
In its shallower areas, fishing has almost completely disappeared due to extreme contamination, leading to community migration and the accelerated degradation of surrounding ecosystems, exacerbated by climate change.
A divided and vulnerable ecosystem
According to the study “Proposals to save Lake Titicaca,” presented by researcher Xavier Lazzaro (Binational Authority of Lake Titicaca), the most affected sector is the smaller lake, of 2,000 km², separated from the larger lake by the Tiquina Strait.
The Cohana Bay, where the Katari River flows into, is the most critical point: it receives human, industrial, and mining waste from El Alto, a city of nearly a million inhabitants.
“If action is not taken in less than ten years, the degradation will be technically irreversible,” warned Lazzaro.

Sources of pollution and lack of infrastructure
Uncontrolled urban growth and lack of treatment worsen the problem.
El Alto has grown without planning, with scattered industries discharging their waste into the rivers. The only existing treatment plant can only process phosphorus and hydrogen, leaving out a large amount of pollutants.
Lazzaro emphasizes that phosphorus must be blocked before reaching the lake, as it feeds algae proliferation and accelerates eutrophication.
Urgent solutions and ecosystem regeneration
Mobile plants, diversion channels, and totora reeds as natural filters.
The study proposes:
- Complete the 14 projected treatment plants
- Incorporate container-type mobile mini-plants
- Build channels to divert contaminated water
- Create lagoons with totora reeds to filter waste
Furthermore, it is suggested to control the urban expansion of El Alto and promote a responsible tourism model, where visitors contribute to the maintenance and care of the lake, considered sacred by indigenous communities.
Ecological, cultural, and economic value of Lake Titicaca
Source of life, ancestral heritage, and driver of regional development.
- Climate regulator and freshwater reserve
- Support for agriculture, fishing, crafts, and tourism
- Spiritual and cultural destination, cradle of the Tiwanaku and Incas
- Habitat of endemic species like the Titicaca grebe
Learning from other cases: hope based on evidence
Lakes Geneva (Switzerland) and Paranoá (Brazil) have managed to recover through sustained actions.
Lazzaro proposes looking at successful experiences of environmental recovery as a reference to prevent the deterioration of Lake Titicaca from becoming irreversible.
The key lies in acting now, with planning, investment, and binational commitment.



