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About the Project

The Water Sustainability Project (WSP) began in 2003 at the University of Victoria's POLIS Project on Ecological Governance in British Columbia, Canada. The project focuses on understanding the structure and dynamics of water use and emphasizes a shift from a supply augmentation through built infrastructure toward managing demand and soft path approaches as part of the broader goal of sustainable water management.

Practising ecological governance engages society to create the systemic reforms required to develop sustainability. By actively seeking ways to integrate ecosystem values and decision-making structures and processes (i.e. markets, law and policy, planning and management), the intent is to develop systems that embed the notion of ecological sustainability in government, business and industry, and civil society. This conception of ecological governance provides a useful framework for analysis when considering efforts aimed at sustainably managing water resources in Canada.

In the context of “governance for innovation,” a term that promotes the adoption of innovative and alternative solutions, the WSP team has developed a comprehensive legal and policy framework for urban water management and detailed action plans for federal, provincial and municipal governments.

Overall project objectives:
To develop innovative governance options that promote sustainable water management, including "watershed governance" as an alternative to centralized, hierarchical and sectoral governance approaches;

To develop water law and policy decision-making tools that promote sustainable water management, long-term integrative planning, and regulatory mechanisms (including legal and institutional reform) to enable ecologically based water allocation;

To create a national network of experts and others interested in the new paradigm of sustainable water management to contribute to and use these models as practical tools for policy and institutional change;

To continue to examine urban and emerging water issues in Canada, including a survey of best practices in demand-side management (DSM) in Canada and abroad; and,

To increase public awareness around the importance, and limits, of water in Canada, thereby ensuring that the above happens as part of a larger cultural change.

See WSP historical highights here.

Research Areas
The work at WSP is divided into four focus areas:

New Water Infrastructure including the "social infrastructure" of conservation policies and programs.

Demand Management & Soft Path two complementary approaches to that move away from the supply-side toward sustainable water management.

Watershed Governance an emerging field of research that addresses issues of governance in the context of water sustainability.

Water Law a field of law that is increasingly influenced by environmental law and Green Legal Theory.

PROJECT UPDATES

NEW! Our Soft Path Pilot Projects are underway in British Columbia and Ontario. We recently began working with the Salt Spring Island Water Council to develop a long-term integrated water conservation plan for Salt Spring Island.

NEW! Can Canada Avoid A Water Crisis? The Forum for Leadership On Water (FLOW) ran an ad in the July 2008 edition of the Hill Times calling for the development of a national freshwater strategy.

We recently hosted a workshop for young leaders on Whole System-Whole City Change: A Watercentric View of Sustainability in Victoria, July 4th - 6th, 2008. The workshop is part of The Future of Water Workshop Series organised by Waterlution - A Water Learning Experience.

NEW! Op-ed by Oliver M Brandes and Linda Nowlan on British Columbia's Living Water Smart Plan released in June 2008.

NEW! Water Licenses and Conservation:  Future Directions for Land Trusts in British Columbia - a report prepared by WSP Project Leader Oliver M Brandes and Deborah Curran for the Land Trust Alliance of BC.

Take a look at our most recent Newsletter (March 2008) here.

The Water Sustainability Project is currently focusing on the research area of Water Law by exploring the emerging legal trends and institutions designed to address challenges associated with water sustainability -- a theme that builds on Green Legal Theory being developed at POLIS.

Oliver M Brandes presented Thinking Beyond Pipes & Pumps for a "webinar" hosted by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities on Sept 26, 2007. Listen to audio podcast and view PDFs of the webinar presentations. An earlier version of the presentation was given at the Canadian Water Resources Association (CWRA) Annual meeting in June 2007.

Soft Path in the News - The Aug 2007 edition of Alternatives is now available, highlighting POLIS's soft path work with Friends of the Earth Canada. Also see the updated version of A Soft Path for Water in a Nutshell, revised in September 2007 to include research results.

A New Path to Water Sustainability for the Town of Oliver, BC - Soft Path Case Study by O M Brandes, T Maas, A Mjolsness & E Reynolds

Urban Water Soft Path: 'Back of the Envelope' Backcasting Framework by O M Brandes & T Maas

 

Updated August 19, 2008

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