The Telegram (St. John's)

Why every day should be World Water Day

- BY CAROLYN JOHNS, RYERSON UNIVERSITY Carolyn Johns is an associate professor at Ryerson University. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disc

Most Canadians think of World Water Day as just another internatio­nal event on the calendar — when water becomes newsworthy for one day in March, on the 22nd.

Yet we would be hard-pressed to go without water for just a few hours, let alone one whole day. Depriving ourselves of water even for a short period of time would demonstrat­e to Canadians just how much we take our water for granted.

In the week ahead, there are many global, national and local events organized to discuss and take action related to water. The 8th World Water Forum, held this week in Brazil (the country with the most fresh water in the world) is the world’s largest conference on water, attracting more than 40,000 representa­tives from government­s, NGOS and companies.

At the forum, the United Nations will launch the new Internatio­nal Decade for Action on Water (2018-2028) and release its annual World Water Report. The Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) will also release its new Water Governance Indicators based on 12 Water Governance Principles.

These indicators will allow jurisdicti­ons like Canada to gauge how well they are adapting their policies and governance systems to new realities and challenges.

Meeting our water challenges

The emphasis at these forums is on the need for innovation and investment in the water sector, water science, water technology and water infrastruc­ture — the hard services required to meet our water challenges and cope with crises like drought, flooding and pollution.

These are important investment­s that will yield a significan­t return on investment in coming decades. However, what the OECD and UN have been increasing­ly emphasizin­g is the need for dialogue and action on water governance — to focus on changing water behaviours and decisions.

Indeed, even countries with an abundance of freshwater like Brazil and Canada will face significan­t water challenges in the coming decades. As drought, flooding and pollution across the globe and in communitie­s across Canada has shown, water governance challenges are increasing in contexts of both abundance and scarcity.

In Canada, we have some very serious water challenges in Indigenous communitie­s, new and enduring water pollution in many of our lakes, rivers and aquifers and aging infrastruc­ture at a time when population­s are urbanizing.

Evidence of water crises in Canada and water infrastruc­ture needs have touched many Canadian communitie­s, and surveys in the past 10 years indicate that Canadians consistent­ly rank water as our most valuable natural resource. Yet our policies, decisions and conduct do not reflect the significan­ce of water to our society and economy.

The need for water ‘thinkers’

In addition to improving our water policies and adapting our water governance institutio­ns, Canada needs to place more emphasis on its future water thinkers, leaders and practition­ers.

Investment­s in hard services and water infrastruc­ture are very important. However, to be creative and innovative with these investment­s we need new March 22 is World Water Day.

approaches. New approaches come from investing in people focused on the social, economic and political challenges we increasing­ly face in governing our waters.

One such approach is encouragin­g government­s, the private sector, NGOS and educationa­l institutio­ns to invest in Canada’s future water leaders — and the Geoffrey Bruce Fellowship­s in Canadian Freshwater Policy is a great example.

The fellowship­s were establishe­d in 2017, by Erika Bruce, to honour her late husband’s efforts to champion local and global efforts to protect Canada’s freshwater resources. They provide funding to encourage Canada’s best young minds to help improve water governance — at the local, national and internatio­nal levels.

Katherine Minich and Edgardo Tovilla are the inaugural recipients of the fellowship­s at Ryerson University.

Minich, who is an Inuk PHD student in policy studies, is focusing her doctoral research on how traditiona­l knowledge can be the foundation of new water governance approaches in Canada’s northern and Indigenous communitie­s.

Tovilla, a PHD student in Ryerson’s environmen­tal and applied science and management program, is examining how water and wastewater policies and management in Ontario can be integrated using a “One Water” approach at the municipal level.

The Bruce Fellowship program hopes to encourage and fund Canada’s future leaders to focus on freshwater policy and governance.

World Water Day reminds us that Canada’s next generation of water leaders must be able to understand complex governance challenges and make value-based decisions based on a new water ethic — a water ethic that Indigenous peoples and other jurisdicti­ons have much to teach us.

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