Thank you.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
As you said, my name is Daniel Wolfish and I am the acting Assistant Deputy Minister for the Canada water agency, a branch within Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Thank you for accommodating my travel to Winnipeg and for enabling me to participate virtually.
I am honoured to be joining you today from Treaty No. 1 Territory, the traditional lands of the Anishinaabe, Ininew, Oji-Cree, Dene, and Dakota; the birthplace of the Métis Nation and Homeland of the Red River Métis.
I am joined today by David Harper, Director General Monitoring and Data Services at the Meteorological Service of Environment Canada, Joanne Volk, Director General Water Science and Technology, Cecile Siewe, Director General Industrial Sectors and Chemicals, and Caroline Blais, Executive Director Forest Products and Fisheries Act.
No resource is more important to Canadians than fresh, clean water. Our lives and livelihoods depend on it.
For many Indigenous Peoples, water is sacred, a source of life that plays a central role in Indigenous cultures, ceremonial practices, governance, and welfare. This freshwater study provides an opportunity to continue to show our commitment and leadership in addressing freshwater issues.
The Government of Canada is commited to safeguarding freshwater resources for generations to come. Environment and Climate Change Canada has a mandate to work on freshwater under several Acts. The department has roles related to freshwater governance, policy, science, stewardship, monitoring and prediction, and regulation and enforcement.
Much of this work is done in close collaboration with provinces and territories, and Indigenous rights-holders, given complex jurisdiction for water in Canada. We are also commited to implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act.
Beyond Environment and Climate Change Canada, many other federal departments and agencies have freshwater-related mandates and I know the Commitee will be hearing from some of them today and later this week.
This freshwater study comes at a time when the Government of Canada and many Canadians recognize that it is critical that we work together to find the best ways to keep Canada’s freshwater safe and well managed. This includes engaging in a meaningful way with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis to advance reconciliation in relation to freshwater in a consistent and coordinated manner across the federal government.
In Canada, freshwater is integral to our economy, society, identity and culture, and is central to Indigenous livelihoods and cultural practices. Canada has the third largest renewable supply of freshwater in the world, about 7% of the global renewable supply.
While Canada is a water-rich country, a significant amount of Canada’s renewable freshwater supply is not easily accessible. Much of Canada’s freshwater is stored as ice and about 60% of Canada’s freshwater flows north into the Arctic Ocean, away from the majority of the population.
Canada is also home to many unique freshwater ecosystems. For example, the Great Lakes watershed, shared by Canada and the United States, is the largest freshwater lake system in the world.
Canadians are concerned over the increasing frequency and magnitude of freshwater challenges due to climate change, particularly after experiencing the floods, the droughts and the fire events of this past summer.
Hence, in 2019, in his mandate letter, the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Canada was directed to create a new Canada water agency to work together with provinces, territories, indigenous communities, local authorities, scientists and others to find the best ways to keep our water safe, clean and well managed. This commitment was reaffirmed in subsequent mandate letters, budgets and speeches from the throne.
Engagement over the past three years on the Canada water agency indicates strong support for federal policies to promote effective management and protection of freshwater resources, as well as for climate change adaptation. This freshwater study will help inform the best ways to achieve these goals.
I would like now to take a moment to highlight some of the work that the federal government is doing to protect vital resources, again noting there is a vast amount of work led by different parts of the government.
The Canada water agency has now been created as a branch within Environment and Climate Change Canada.
The federal government has also committed to introducing legislation that will fully establish the Canada water agency as a stand-alone agency with the headquarters in Winnipeg, where I am today.
The Canada water agency has a mandate to improve freshwater management in Canada by providing leadership, effective collaboration federally, and improved coordination and collaboration with provinces, territories and indigenous peoples to proactively address national and regional transboundary water challenges and opportunities.
To this end, the agency will deliver key elements of the strengthened freshwater action plan. This is a key freshwater protection initiative led by Environment and Climate Change Canada, with partners for decades, that received significant funding in budget 2023, including $650 million over 10 years starting in 2023-24, to support monitoring, assessment and restoration work in eight water bodies of national significance across Canada.
Budget 2023 also provided $22.6 million over three years, starting in this fiscal year, to support better coordination of efforts to protect fresh water across Canada, $85.1 million over five years and $21 million ongoing to support the creation of the agency.