Centring Water in Impact Assessment: Reconsidering Environmental and Cultural Flows in Development Decision-Making in Canada.

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Nathanael T Bergbusch, Melanie Lo, André St-Hilaire, Robert B Gibson, Timothy D Jardine, Kelsey Leonard, Simon C Courtenay
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Abstract

Considering regional impacts on downstream communities and ecosystems is challenging in impact assessments. We suggest that environmental and cultural flows have the potential to be applied to protect water more comprehensively in assessment but are currently underutilized. Environmental and cultural flows refer to adequate water quantity and quality for the environment and Indigenous rights. Through interviews and a scoping review of legislation and assessments, we address how these concepts are and could be embedded within Canadian impact assessments. To date, environmental flows have been considered in assessments involving dams, oil and gas, and mining, and the focus has been on fish and habitat, rather than Indigenous rights and cumulative withdrawals. We propose Regional Readiness through water councils, change, and consensus (three Cs) to prepare watershed actors to protect environment and cultural flows in impact assessments. The three Cs are: (1) Advisory councils dedicated to creating regional objectives and rules for ecosystem and rights-based needs, (2) Assessing hydrologic and water quality change with regional data and relationships to water, and (3) Building consensus on the cultural and ecological significance and sensitivity of water bodies. Development of this framework follows examples from Canadian water-related assessments and initiatives: Wolastoq Ecological Limits of Hydrological Alteration, Athabasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree assessments, Yinka Dene Water Management Policy, Grand Council Treaty #3 Nibi Declaration, Slave Watershed Environmental Effects Program, and Strategic Assessment of Wood Buffalo National Park. These cases demonstrate how the inclusion of environmental and cultural flows processes in assessment could enable greater water protection.

以水为中心的影响评估:重新考虑加拿大发展决策中的环境和文化流动。
考虑对下游社区和生态系统的区域影响在影响评估中具有挑战性。我们建议,环境和文化流动有可能在评估中更全面地用于保护水,但目前尚未得到充分利用。环境和文化流动指的是为环境和土著权利提供足够的水的数量和质量。通过访谈和对立法和评估的范围审查,我们解决了这些概念如何以及如何嵌入加拿大影响评估。迄今为止,在涉及水坝、石油和天然气以及采矿的评估中已考虑到环境流动,重点是鱼类和栖息地,而不是土著权利和累积提取。我们建议通过水理事会(water councils)、变革(change)和共识(consensus)(三个c)为流域行动者做好准备,在影响评估中保护环境和文化流动。这三个c是:(1)咨询委员会致力于为生态系统和基于权利的需求制定区域目标和规则;(2)利用区域数据和与水的关系评估水文和水质变化;(3)就水体的文化和生态意义和敏感性达成共识。该框架的制定遵循了加拿大与水有关的评估和倡议的例子:沃拉斯托克水文变化生态限制、阿萨巴斯卡奇佩维扬和米基绍克里评估、因卡德尼水管理政策、大理事会条约3号尼比宣言、奴隶流域环境影响计划和伍德布法罗国家公园战略评估。这些案例表明,将环境和文化流动过程纳入评估如何能够更好地保护水资源。
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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来源期刊
Environmental Management
Environmental Management 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
2.90%
发文量
178
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Management offers research and opinions on use and conservation of natural resources, protection of habitats and control of hazards, spanning the field of environmental management without regard to traditional disciplinary boundaries. The journal aims to improve communication, making ideas and results from any field available to practitioners from other backgrounds. Contributions are drawn from biology, botany, chemistry, climatology, ecology, ecological economics, environmental engineering, fisheries, environmental law, forest sciences, geosciences, information science, public affairs, public health, toxicology, zoology and more. As the principal user of nature, humanity is responsible for ensuring that its environmental impacts are benign rather than catastrophic. Environmental Management presents the work of academic researchers and professionals outside universities, including those in business, government, research establishments, and public interest groups, presenting a wide spectrum of viewpoints and approaches.
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