HR: 08:05h
AN: CG21B-01 INVITED [Abstracts]
TI: The Report of the Expert Panel on the Sustainable Management of Groundwater in Canada: The Council of Canadian Academies
AU: * Bruce, J P
EM: jpbruce@sympatico.ca
AF: Council of Canadian Academies, 180 Elgin St
Suite 1401, Ottawa, ON K2P 2K3, Canada
AB:
The Expert Panel on Groundwater was established in response to a request from the Minister of Natural
Resources Canada, asking the Council of Canadian Academies to assess what is needed to achieve
sustainable management of Canada's groundwater resources, from a science perspective. To this end, the
Council of Canadian Academies assembled an interdisciplinary panel of experts who interpreted science, in
the context of this assessment, to include natural and social sciences as well as local, provincial, and federal
governance.
The panel's report, released on May 11th 2009, noted that nearly 10 million Canadians rely on groundwater for
household purposes, in addition to uses for agriculture and industry. Both media and public have expressed
many recent concerns about water supplies and their quality.
The concept of groundwater sustainability developed by the panel encompasses five interrelated goals: three
that involve primarily the physical sciences and engineering, and two that are essentially socio-economic in
nature. These goals are as follows:
i. Protection of groundwater supplies from depletion
ii. Protection of groundwater quality from contamination
iii. Protection of ecosystem viability
iv. Achievement of economic and social well-being
v. Application of good governance
The achievement of groundwater sustainability requires a careful analysis and balancing of the five goals; a
comprehensive sustainability framework for groundwater has not yet been implemented in Canada. Adoption
by federal, provincial and local jurisdictions of such a framework, based on the goals outlined above, would be
invaluable in guiding efforts to improve the understanding and management of groundwater. To contextualize
the components of the sustainability framework, the panel examined a series of case studies that typify
examples along a spectrum, from near-sustainable, to situations that are fail to meet the outlined criteria.
The panel identified the fragmentation of water management at all levels, between groundwater and surface
water and between quantity and quality, as a major hindrance to the sustainable management of groundwater
in Canada. Several problem areas were highlighted in the report, including the need for a cooperative data
management system; inadequate numbers of well-trained hydrogeologists and other water specialists; and a
frequent failure to consider groundwater as part of the hydrological cycle in watersheds or ground-watersheds.
A series of recommendations to address these, and other problems, were developed by the Panel and will be
outlined in the presentation.
DE: 1829 Groundwater hydrology
DE: 1830 Groundwater/surface water interaction
DE: 1831 Groundwater quality
DE: 1832 Groundwater transport
DE: 1880 Water management (6334)
SC: Canadian Geophysical Union [CG]
MN: 2009 Joint Assembly