Reclaiming the Xhotsa: climate adaptation and ecosystem restoration via the return of Sumas Lake

Riley J. R. Finn, Murray Ned - Kwilosintun, Leah Ballantyne, Ian Hamilton, Janice Kwo, Rayanna Seymour-Hourie, Deborah Carlson, Kristen E. Walters, Jennifer Grenz, Tara G. Martin
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Abstract

Sumas Lake (Xhotsa), located in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia, Canada, was the heart of Semá:th Nation Territory and the epicenter of a complex Indigenous food system. For the Semá:th people, the lake represented life and livelihood. In 1924, the lake was stolen and drained in an instance of land theft that occurred during a nationwide campaign of land dispossession and genocide, decimating an ecology that supported a rich and diverse Indigenous food system and replacing it with a settler food system. A century later, in November 2021 climate change induced flooding caused the lake to return, resulting in the evacuation of thousands of people and causing millions in damages to homes and infrastructure. Since the flood, the response has been a continuation of the status quo to protect settler agricultural lands via increased investment in hard structures that control the flow of water based on assumptions of the predictability of future flow conditions. We offer a missing narrative by bringing together an analysis of Indigenous laws and oral tradition with an assessment of the economic costs of “managed retreat”, defined as the purposeful relocation of people and infrastructure out of harm’s way. We find that the cost of buying out properties in the lakebed and allowing the lake to return is close to half the cost ($1 billion) of maintaining the status quo ($2.4 billion), while facilitating climate adaptation, and restoration of a floodplain ecosystem that supported thriving populations of people, salmon, sturgeon, ducks, and food and medicinal plants– including many species which are now endangered. Returning Sumas Lake by centering ‘Water Back’ as a climate resiliency solution, enacts both food systems and ecological reconciliation, addressing the harms caused by the loss of the lake to the Semá:th People that is still felt to this day. In a time when climate change induced flooding is predicted to increase, this study demonstrates how the inclusion of Indigenous laws and knowledges are critical to the development of solutions toward a more sustainable and just future.
重获 Xhotsa:通过苏马斯湖的回归实现气候适应和生态系统恢复
苏马斯湖(Xhotsa)位于加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省弗雷泽谷,是塞马特族领地的中心,也是复杂的土著食物系统的中心。对塞马特人来说,湖代表着生命和生计。1924 年,在一场全国范围的土地剥夺和种族灭绝运动中,该湖在一次土地盗窃事件中被盗并被抽干,支撑丰富多样的土著食物系统的生态环境遭到破坏,取而代之的是定居者食物系统。一个世纪后,2021 年 11 月,气候变化引发的洪水导致湖水回流,造成数千人撤离,房屋和基础设施损失数百万美元。自洪灾发生以来,人们的应对措施一直是维持现状,通过增加对硬质结构的投资来保护定居者的农业用地,这些硬质结构根据对未来水流状况的可预测性的假设来控制水流。我们将对土著法律和口述传统的分析与对 "有管理的撤退 "经济成本的评估结合起来,提供了一种缺失的叙事方式。"有管理的撤退 "的定义是有目的地将人和基础设施迁出危险地带。我们发现,买断湖床中的财产并允许苏马斯湖回归的成本(10 亿美元)接近维持现状成本(24 亿美元)的一半,同时还能促进气候适应,恢复曾支持着人类、鲑鱼、鲟鱼、鸭子以及食用和药用植物(包括许多现已濒临灭绝的物种)繁衍生息的洪泛区生态系统。通过将 "水的回归 "作为气候适应解决方案的中心,归还苏马斯湖实现了食物系统和生态的协调,解决了因失去苏马斯湖而给塞马人造成的伤害,这种伤害至今仍能感受到。据预测,气候变化引起的洪灾将会增加,本研究表明,纳入土著法律和知识对于制定解决方案以实现更加可持续和公正的未来至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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