MEDIA RELEASE
For Immediate Release
July 8, 2010
Message to Renner: Our Water is Not for Sale
Campaign to challenge move to provincial market for water
Our Water is Not for Sale, a network of organizations and individuals from all corners of Alberta is
launching a campaign to call on Alberta Environment Minister Rob Renner to stop plans to introduce
legislation to establish a province‐wide water market.
The government is about to make major, irreversible changes to how we allocate water throughout
Alberta. According to recommendations released by the provincial government, it is clear it is moving
towards a system of water markets to determine future water allocation. The plan would create a
deregulated market system that would give control of our water to a handful of senior licence holders
who would profit by selling off a resource they were historically given for free.
“We are in a water crisis. Throughout Alberta we have record low river flows and growing human and
economic demands. In the South Saskatchewan River Basin we have already seen the reality of overallocation,”
explains Sheila Muxlow, Interim Director with the Sierra Club Prairie. “We need water policy
reforms that ensure water rights are protected for our ecosystems, basic human needs and future
generations.”
“There’s no doubt that our water allocation system can’t handle the pressures we’re seeing, and needs
to be updated,” adds Scott Harris, Prairie Regional Organizer with the Council of Canadians. “But
government plans to simply let the market decide who has access to water and who doesn’t – at the
same time as they remove much of the government oversight – will make the situation worse, not
better.”
“First Nations have been the stewards of the water since time immemorial,” asserts Joseph Jobin,
Environmental Manager for the Treaty 8 First Nations. “The Assembly of Treaty Chiefs has rejected the
proposals for water market expansion in Alberta through clear resolutions, but the government
continues to pursue a path that will undermine our Treaty rights. This is unacceptable.”
“Many municipalities are already struggling with water scarcity, so we know that decisions about how
we allocate water have a fundamental impact on whether our municipalities and citizens will continue
to thrive in the future,” says Linda Sloan, Edmonton Ward 1 City Councilor. “So it’s important that we
get it right. That’s why the province needs to look at all the options and why the Alberta Urban
Municipalities Association wants to examine the implications for municipalities before sweeping
changes are made.”
“Farmers know better than anyone how critical water is,” says Doug Scott, Alberta board member with
the National Farmers Union. “Albertans understand the importance of local food production, and don’t
want to see a system where Alberta’s farmers will be forced to compete for water on the open market
with large corporations with deep pockets.”
“Water is a human right and a sacred trust, not a commodity to be bought, sold and traded,” stresses
the Very Reverend Bill Phipps, the former Moderator of the United Church of Canada. “Values of
ecological integrity, justice, equity, and fair access should be at the heart of how we make choices about
water, and those aren’t the values that are going to come out of a market for water.”
Our Water is Not for Sale has sent an open letter signed by 45 organizations and individuals to Minister
Renner calling on him to develop a water allocation system that prioritizes ecosystem health and basic
human needs rather than basing access to water on the ability to pay, to explore a full range of policy
options before considering changes to the Water Act, and to conduct broad and meaningful public
consultations before new legislation is introduced.
Other organizations and individuals can continue to sign on to the open letter, get more information
about the review and take action at www.ourwaterisnotforsale.com.
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