This presentation considers water export proposals between, and the pattern of existing interbasin diversions within, Canada and the United States in the latter half of the 20th century. Neither appears to have much potential for growth, because of a fundamental shift in developed economies from water supply to demand management. But trend is one thing, destiny another. Canadians, and their American neighbors in the Great Lakes basin, continue to pursue legislative protection for their water heritage over the long term
In spring 1998, the Nova Group of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, proposed to ship nearly 160 million gal...
The Great Lakes of North America – indeed, the whole of the Canada-United States (US) border – have ...
This Note argues that article II of the Boundary Waters Treaty, when applied, has failed to resolve ...
This presentation considers water export proposals between, and the pattern of existing interbasin d...
It is no real mystery why Canada’s population and economy are an order of magnitude smaller than wha...
Canada has twenty per cent of the planet’s total fresh water supply. Canada’s water wealth raises th...
Canada’s water sovereignty is increasingly threatened by the growing scarcity of this resource aroun...
The U.S. is facing a serious decline in its water supply and is likely to turn to Canada as its next...
Hydrologists expect the demand for water will continue to increase with the world’s growing populati...
A potential global water crisis is looming. While exporting Canada\u27s water may appear to offer he...
This paper explores the common misconception that Canada has an infinite supply of freshwater. The t...
Canada faces special challenges as a federal state in managing its vast water resources, many of whi...
Great Lakes water fuels $4.2 trillion of gross-domestic product (“GDP”), making the Great Lakes Regi...
Declining access to fresh water is one of the twenty-first century’s most pressing environmental and...
With a relatively small population and 7% of the world's available freshwater resources, Canada is w...
In spring 1998, the Nova Group of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, proposed to ship nearly 160 million gal...
The Great Lakes of North America – indeed, the whole of the Canada-United States (US) border – have ...
This Note argues that article II of the Boundary Waters Treaty, when applied, has failed to resolve ...
This presentation considers water export proposals between, and the pattern of existing interbasin d...
It is no real mystery why Canada’s population and economy are an order of magnitude smaller than wha...
Canada has twenty per cent of the planet’s total fresh water supply. Canada’s water wealth raises th...
Canada’s water sovereignty is increasingly threatened by the growing scarcity of this resource aroun...
The U.S. is facing a serious decline in its water supply and is likely to turn to Canada as its next...
Hydrologists expect the demand for water will continue to increase with the world’s growing populati...
A potential global water crisis is looming. While exporting Canada\u27s water may appear to offer he...
This paper explores the common misconception that Canada has an infinite supply of freshwater. The t...
Canada faces special challenges as a federal state in managing its vast water resources, many of whi...
Great Lakes water fuels $4.2 trillion of gross-domestic product (“GDP”), making the Great Lakes Regi...
Declining access to fresh water is one of the twenty-first century’s most pressing environmental and...
With a relatively small population and 7% of the world's available freshwater resources, Canada is w...
In spring 1998, the Nova Group of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, proposed to ship nearly 160 million gal...
The Great Lakes of North America – indeed, the whole of the Canada-United States (US) border – have ...
This Note argues that article II of the Boundary Waters Treaty, when applied, has failed to resolve ...