Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1739
Citation Climate Change in the Canadian Columbia Basin: Starting the Dialogue. Columbia Basin Trust.
Organization Columbia Basin Trust
URL http://www.cbc.ca/bc/news/061019_climate.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords This project was commissioned by the Water Initiatives Program of the Columbia Basin Trust with the assistance of the Pacific Climate Change Impact Consortium from the University of Victoria and a number of other scientific researchers. The objective of this pamphlet is to provide preliminary information on climate change in the Canadian portion of the Basin that may be used for initiating the dialogue on this issue in the communities of our region. It is a synthesis and overview of current technical knowledge, with some additional contributions on historical trends and future projections. It is acknowledged that there remain significant gaps in information and extensive research and monitoring are needed in order to fully understand this complex and important issue. The Columbia Basin Trust’s water mandate is to work with Basin residents to improve their understanding and involvement in water. The Columbia Basin Trust’s Water Initiatives Program is interested in supporting organizations and communities that are keen to work together to better understand past and future climate changes, to assess vulnerabilities and opportunities, and to identify and implement wise adaptation actions. Higher summer and winter temperatures, declining mountain snowpack, reduced snowfall, long, dry summers, sudden heavy rains – the residents of the Columbia River Basin in Canada are experiencing different weather conditions than in the past. They are also seeing changes in natural systems including melting glaciers, lower summer streamflows, more frequent wildfires, and outbreaks of forest pests such as the mountain pine beetle. Many are asking if these differences are a product of climate change, or if they are just extremes in natural variation in our climate. There is also widespread concern about what actions people in the Basin should be taking to reduce human risks while adapting to new climate circumstances. In response to these questions and concerns, the Water Initiatives Program of the Columbia Basin Trust contracted the Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium at the University of Victoria in 2006 to work with a number of climate scientists to analyze climate change impacts in the geographic area encompassed by the Columbia Basin Trust Act. This area, defined as that part of the drainage of the Columbia River in Canada affected by the Columbia River Treaty of 1964, is bounded by the Monashee Mountains on the west and the Rockies on the east, hereafter referred to as the Basin. The study, A Preliminary Assessment of Climate Trends, Variability and Change in the Canadian Portion of the Columbia Basin – Focusing on Water Resources, concluded that the climate of this part of the Columbia Basin has been and will continue to change in ways that will alter the way people derive their livelihood in the Basin. The study underscores the need for residents of the Basin to take these changes carefully into account in the planning of their social, economic and environmental futures. This pamphlet provides preliminary information about: • The climate-related changes in our environment that we have been experiencing in the recent past. • Possible future changes in climate and our environment. • The impacts these changes might have on the Basin’s water resources. • What we might do in response to these impacts • How productive dialogue can begin in the Basin about climate and climate related issues. Citizens are encouraged to think about these findings, and talk with their families and with others in their communities and in their places of work about what can be done individually and together to live safely, reduce vulnerabilities and risks, and take advantage of opportunities created by new climate conditions.
Information Type Report
Regional Watershed Columbia River
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