LAS CRUCES, N.M.— The Land of Sacrifice, a new documentary released today by filmmaker Annie Ersinghaus, shows how New Mexico’s fracking boom is heaping health and environmental burdens on frontline communities.
“I take pride that I’m from the Land of Enchantment, but our state has a pretty big secret,” said Ersinghaus. “When I discovered the damage the oil and gas industry is doing here, I knew I had to tell this story. The film pulls back the curtain on the heavy burden borne by our neighbors and our lands, and the underdog story of the people who are fighting back.”
The Land of Sacrifice highlights plaintiffs in Atencio v. State, a groundbreaking constitutional lawsuit filed in 2023 by NMLAWS, a coalition of Indigenous, frontline, youth and environmental organizations, and community members. The case seeks to hold New Mexico leaders accountable for the harms to human health and the environment caused by uncontrolled, state-permitted oil and gas pollution.
In November the New Mexico Supreme Court agreed to hear the lawsuit after a lower court dismissed it in June.
“This documentary is a stark portrait of the price New Mexico communities pay while the fracking industry cashes in,” said Gail Evans, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity who leads the lawsuit’s legal team and is featured in the film. “Our constitution requires New Mexico’s leaders to prevent the pollution and despoilment of our lands and waters. The film makes a strong case for why we need urgent action. I’m hopeful the state Supreme Court will order officials to control pollution from this filthy industry.”
Oil and gas production in New Mexico has more than tripled in the past five years and increased more than tenfold since 2010. This surge of production has created devastating air, water and climate pollution in the San Juan Basin — part of the culturally important Greater Chaco Landscape — and the Permian Basin, one of the largest oilfields in the world.
Despite this unprecedented pollution and a constitutional duty to control it, decades-old exemptions in state laws allow the oil and gas industry to avoid most environmental protections intended to safeguard New Mexico’s air, water and people.
“Fracking operations have devastated the sacred Greater Chaco landscape,” said Daniel Tso, a Navajo community leader from New Mexico’s San Juan Basin who is featured in the film. “With the release of this film, all New Mexicans can learn about the harms of the fracking industry and join us in calling on our state government to protect us.”
The Land of Sacrifice is available to watch for free on the NMLAWS website and will be screened at upcoming events in Carlsbad, Santa Fe and Albuquerque.