Vancouver Sun

WATER CRITICAL TO OUR FUTURE

- LAURA BRANDES AND ROBERT SANDFORD Laura Brandes is the communicat­ions director at the POLIS project on ecological governance and POLIS water sustainabi­lity project at the University of Victoria's centre for global studies. Robert Sandford is the senior go

It's almost World Water Day, a day to draw attention to just how important fresh water is in our lives.

This World Water Day, British Columbians face the reality of another record-setting year of drought. The profound effects of last year's relentless dry weather have continued into 2024. Snowpacks are at record lows and half the province is currently experienci­ng drought at what should be a wet time of year.

It's a fact that the future we are facing is uncertain. The recent string of devastatin­g and deadly floods, droughts and wildfires in B.C. foreshadow a chaotic future — a future where these events are not only more common, but also increasing­ly severe.

But, this doesn't mean communitie­s can't be strong, resilient and safe in the face of climate change. Water and climate are intrinsica­lly intertwine­d, and how we manage and govern water will directly inform how we adapt to climate change. On World Water Day this Friday, British Columbians can celebrate a number of milestones and good work being done in communitie­s across B.C. to maintain, restore and improve healthy watersheds. This work takes different forms, from monitoring fish population­s, to developing new decision-making processes in local watersheds, to leading youth education, to offering policy recommenda­tions and holding government to account. The provincial government has a crucial role here.

Water and watershed security have become major priorities in recent years in British Columbia. The new B.C. Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardshi­p was created in 2022 with a commitment to improve water and land-use planning and develop the necessary legal and institutio­nal tools to build resilience on the landscape and co-governance arrangemen­ts with Indigenous government­s. However, much work and additional actions are urgently needed to address drought, reduce conflict, and enhance social cohesion in B.C. Recent recommenda­tions based on a decade of work from the University of Victoria's POLIS water sustainabi­lity project urge focus on three main areas.

Addressing 'water gaps': The provincial government needs better mechanisms to ensure basic water management is in place to proactivel­y manage and respond to extreme climate events. The absolute basics include implementi­ng groundwate­r licensing, setting environmen­tal and critical flow thresholds, providing source drinking water protection, and providing state-of-the-watershed reporting.

Supporting watershed

co-governance projects: Some new approaches to watershed governance are being tested across the province, and they are showing that planning and co-governance can effectivel­y advance watershed security and reconcilia­tion while reducing conflict. As one example, May 12, 2023 was a historic day when Cowichan Tribes and the province of British Columbia signed the Xwulqw'selu Watershed Planning Agreement (S-xats-thut tst — We Agree) in the Xwulqw'selu (Koksilah) watershed on Vancouver Island. In doing so, they launched a historic multi-year watershed planning process, including work to develop (and then implement) the first water sustainabi­lity plan in B.C. — a potentiall­y powerful tool under the Water Sustainabi­lity Act. The Xwulqw'selu process is a potential beacon for other regions and communitie­s. Over the coming years, it will offer a real model.

Growing B.C.'s Watershed

Security Fund: In March 2023, the provincial government and B.C.-First Nations Water Table announced the creation of a $100-million watershed security fund. This was another important step to create enduring change. However, it is now March 2024 and the fund needs further money to be effective, which must include federal partners to achieve the necessary target of $75 million per year. Looking ahead: It is apparent that more resilience and a better approach to watershed security will require reconcilia­tion between Crown and Indigenous government­s built around shared decisions and authority. It will also require better prediction­s, better basic freshwater management, better intergover­nmental co-operation, better water monitoring to support effective adaptation, and better designed infrastruc­ture to help navigate the turbulent waters ahead. With global temperatur­es and sea levels rising, we are living at a transforma­tional moment for all of humanity. And we can seize this moment. By making watershed security a priority, British Columbia can thrive for future generation­s. Healthy watersheds are the foundation of our collective health, spiritual well-being, quality of life and prosperity. This World Water Day, let's be courageous, hold our government­s accountabl­e, and continue to get to work.

 ?? LAURA BRANDES ?? World Water Day is Friday and it's important action is taken to protect our fresh water resources and to hold government­s accountabl­e, write Laura Brandes and Robert Sandford.
LAURA BRANDES World Water Day is Friday and it's important action is taken to protect our fresh water resources and to hold government­s accountabl­e, write Laura Brandes and Robert Sandford.

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