Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Richmond Chamber of Commerce. 2014. The economic importance of the lower Fraser River. Richmond Chamber of Commerce.
Organization Richmond Chamber of Commerce
URL
Abstract/Description or Keywords The Lower Fraser River (LFR) is a vitally important resource for the Lower Mainland, British Columbia, and
Canada as a whole. In addition to port activity, the LFR supports a myriad of other economic activities
essential to the region and beyond. Given its strategic assets, the river is poised to become an even more
significant economic driver in the future.
PRIMARY ECONOMIC INDICATORS
• The port function of the LFR rivals Canadian traffic on the St. Lawrence Seaway, both in terms of
tonnages and jobs
• Port Metro Vancouver is the largest port in Canada and largest port by export tonnage in North
America
• The Lower Mainland has over 50% of B.C.’s population and $50 billion dollars’ worth of development in
the floodplain of the LRF
• Soil in Fraser Valley supports some of the most fertile agricultural land in Canada and annually
generates more than 62% of the province’s gross farm receipts ($1.6 billion)
• 9 of 10 Federal Small Craft Harbours (SCH) in the region are located along the LFR. Steveston hosts the
largest SCH in Canada, a key facility for the commercial fishing industry on the B.C. coast
THREATS TO FUTURE SUSTAINABILTY
• 300,000 people live in the floodplain of the LFR. By 2040, an additional one million people will be living
in the Lower Mainland region, putting additional pressure on all infrastructure upgrades
• Sea levels at the mouth of the river are expected to rise in excess of one metre by end of this century:
o Preliminary estimates place cost of diking upgrades by 2100 at nearly $9 billion for the tidal areas of
the river and for adjacent coastal reaches
• Storm surges, combined with high tides in El Nino years, could overtop existing flood protection
infrastructure, even without additional sea level rise
• In some years, the spring freshet has come close to overtopping the existing dikes along the freshwater
part of the river in the Fraser Valley
• Damage from a major dike failure along the Lower Fraser could cost tens of billions of dollars, with very
serious impacts on the economy of this region, B.C. and all of Canada
• Each year during the spring freshet, approximately 32 million m3 of sediment is transported by the
Fraser River, with roughly 10% of this material settling in the lower reaches of the river. There is a strong
need for increased dredging of these parts of the river
• Need for preservation of industrial land is clear: Between 1980 - 2010, the Cities of Vancouver,
Richmond, Burnaby & Surrey altogether lost 3000 hectares of industrial land
RECOMMENDATIONS
The Fraser River is not an arbitrary subsection of geography that any one agency can deal with
independently. All levels of government and other key stakeholders must come together in such a way that
they are committed to, and tasked with, managing the Lower Fraser River as an interconnected system, in
which the interests of navigation, public safety, and the natural environment are managed holistically as one
system.
Information Type report
Regional Watershed Lower Fraser
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
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