The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Alberta municipali­ties, farmers agree to cut water use as drought persists

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Municipali­ties and irrigation districts in the western Canadian province of Alberta have agreed to use less water this summer to combat a severe ongoing drought, the provincial government said on Friday.

Environmen­t Minister Rebecca Schulz said water license holders had signed news memorandum­s of understand­ing covering four river basins in the southern half of the province.

Alberta, which produces most of Canada’s oil, natural gas and beef, plus big wheat and canola harvests, opened watershari­ng negotiatio­ns among licence-holders for the first time in two decades as it entered its fourth year of drought this year.

The province relies on melting snow and precipitat­ion for most of its water supply and has allocated water since 1894.

Under the new agreements, municipali­ties will voluntaril­y reduce water consumptio­n by 5-10 per cent, Schulz said, while industry will use the minimum amount of water needed for reliable operations.

Irrigation districts, which account for 46 per cent of Alberta’s water allocation, have also agreed to use less by allowing other water users to receive their share and then dividing up what is left.

The level of Alberta’s snowpack - the snow that accumulate­d over the past winter - in the last week of April will be key to determinin­g when the water-sharing agreements will need to be activated, Schulz said.

“These agreements will only be implemente­d or activated if they are needed, and they will be regularly adjusted as drought conditions change,” she told a news conference.

Some municipali­ties had already begun proactivel­y reducing water use, she added.

As of the end of March, 66 per cent of Canada was classed as abnormally dry or in drought, according to Agricultur­e Canada, a slight improvemen­t from February.

Schulz said Alberta appeared to have more water available this year than in 2001, the last time water-sharing negotiatio­ns took place.

Alex Ostrop, chair of the Alberta Irrigation Districts Associatio­n who farms in the upper Old Man river basin in southweste­rn Alberta, expects to receive roughly half the usual water allocation.

“(That) will have a significan­t operationa­l and economic impact on each affected irrigation farmer and they have spent the spring making tough decisions with respect to cropping and rotation,” Ostrop told reporters. Reuters

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