News of the drying up of Lake Mead, the largest-capacity water reservoir in the United States, and the recent high-profile release of California’s strategy for dealing with the state’s growing water shortages are combining to raise questions of whether Canada will one day be exporting its fresh water south. The prospect of our water being exported in bulk to a thirsty U.S. neighbour captures Canadians’ attention. For one, the subject goes to the heart of concern about our national sovereignty. It is also a scenario that is readily and intuitively grasped: one can see in the mind’s eye Canada’s water flowing north to south — top to bottom on the map of North America — as if through some giant open tap, even though many cross-border rivers actually flow south to north.
N.S. protects Colchester watershed after years of municipal, community action
Politicians and locals in the Tatamagouche, N.S., area are celebrating new safeguards for their drinking water. Environment Minister Tim Halman announced Tuesday that the province has designated the French River watershed as a protected water area. The Municipality of the County of Colchester officially asked the province for the designation back in 2020, following growing concerns over mining exploration between Wentworth and Warwick Mountain in the Cobequid Highlands.
Private member’s bill tabled by Okanagan MP highlights water protection shortfalls
A private member’s bill tabled on Tuesday seeks to draw attention to what one Member of Parliament says are insufficient environmental protections for Canada’s lakes and rivers. On Dec. 14, NDP MP Richard Cannings introduced Bill C-214, which would amend the Canadian Navigable Waters Act. The bill aims to add more than a dozen lakes, rivers and creeks in his B.C. riding of South Okanagan-West Kootenay to the law’s list of protected waters in an attempt to regain safeguards that were lost in the Harper-era rollback of environmental protections and never fully reinstated under the current Liberal government.
Cyberattack on Florida water treatment plant raises alarms in Canada
Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri told a news conference Monday that someone remotely accessed a computer for the City of Oldsmar water treatment system on Friday and briefly increased the amount of sodium hydroxide, also known as lye, by a factor of more than 100. The Tampa Bay Times said the chemical is used in small amounts to control the acidity of water, but it’s also a corrosive compound commonly found in household cleaning supplies such as liquid drain cleaners.