I want to thank the committee for inviting me to share my expertise on fresh water and the impacts of climate change, and for undertaking this study.
I'm grateful for online technology today. I am on Mi'kma'ki lands, the ancestral and traditional lands of the Mi'kmaq people. However, the land and waters I will be speaking to today are the traditional homelands and territory of first nations, Inuit and Métis people, and remain home to diverse indigenous people. The water and land was and remains native land, and it is important to keep this front and centre.
As was mentioned, my name is Elizabeth Hendriks. My role at WWF Canada is vice-president of restoration and regeneration.
Today my testimony will illustrate two core points. First, we are facing the dual crisis of climate change and biodiversity. Freshwater impacts are core in that story. Second, with federal investment we can address these crises by stewarding, protecting and restoring nature. This investment will have cobenefits for our communities, economy and the nature that we depend on for our survival.
The challenge in Canada and around the world is that we are witnessing the devastating impacts of a planet that is out of balance. Climate change is a real and present threat, and we're regularly reminded of how much our world has changed with extreme weather events.
Recently at the Globe Forum in British Columbia Premier Eby spoke frankly of the climate impacts to that province. Parts of the province are experiencing high levels of drought and there is concern that water levels in the dams will prevent their ability to generate power at the level needed to serve customers.
Here in Nova Scotia, in 2022, our government put out an analysis of climate change impacts for the future. This report said that by 2050 warmer temperatures would mean that wildfires would be the biggest threat to Nova Scotia, yet just one year after that 2022 report, we watched a massive wildfire devastate the Halifax region.
Unfortunately, the climate crisis isn't the only crisis before us. The planet's biodiversity is shrinking and quickly. There is a slow yet persistent disappearance of nature and the diversity of life on this planet. It is bad for nature and it is bad for us. Specifically, freshwater ecosystems are undervalued and understudied. Fresh water is critical for community and species health. There is also a real cost to Canadians.
In Manitoba, financial predictions are that the average potential crop yields could fall by 10% to 30% due to higher temperatures and lower soil moisture. Hailstorms in Winnipeg and Calgary combined to cause more than $250 million in damages, and in Regina, unexpected significant snowfall events and resulting road maintenance costs in 2022 produced a municipal operating deficit. The city is directly linking the growing operational costs with climate change.
Operational costs of managing water are also putting major pressures on municipal budgets in Quebec. In 2023, Quebec public security officials announced 89 communities affected by spring flooding, while places like Sutton, Quebec, were addressing the costs of drought conditions.
There is a solution. We can tackle the biodiversity crisis and the climate crisis by protecting and restoring nature. We can address climate risks to communities and economies by addressing freshwater challenges in our communities. Because nature is habitat, it's the building block for biodiversity. It stores carbon. It absorbs floods. It holds the earth in place, preventing landslides and erosion. It keeps fresh water available and accessible for food production, sanitation and basic needs, and nature keeps our communities resilient.
Nature-based solutions can help our towns and cities be more climate resilient and natural disaster-resilient, too. Do you know a healthy silver maple can absorb 220 litres of water per hour? That is a lot more than a concrete culvert.
Healthy terrestrial ecosystems can ensure healthy freshwater ecosystems that collect, store and filter water. Restoring blue carbon, peatland and wetlands can absorb significant carbon emissions and support our communities.
The strength of the federal government lies in reconciliation and investment via the power of convening and capacity building. Here's where you come in, because you're all committed to promoting responsible, innovative and effective water resource management through this study. You have a voice and authority, and your expertise carries a lot of weight in your parties and in your home communities and ridings, ridings with voters who are all experiencing the real impacts of climate change.
In the face of biodiversity and climate crises, water management through freshwater restoration and protection strategies is going to be critical to mitigating the risks, threats and impacts of climate change.
With that, thank you for your time.