Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C., N.W.T Sign Historic Deal To Jointly Manage Mackenzie River Watershed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Oct, 2015 01:25 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia and the Northwest Territories have reached an agreement to co-operatively manage the water that flows across their shared boundaries into the massive Mackenzie River Basin.
     
    Environment ministers from the neighbouring jurisdictions met in Vancouver to sign the deal, which completes years of negotiations.
     
    N.W.T. Environment and Natural Resources Minister Michael Miltenberger says the accord is only the second of its kind, after the territory signed a similar deal with Alberta in March.
     
    Miltenberger says the agreement is especially crucial given the challenges posed by this past year's harrowing fire season and record-breaking drought.
     
    B.C.'s Environment Minister Mary Polak says the deal foreshadows similar bilateral water management agreements in the works with the Alberta and Yukon governments.
     
    The Mackenzie River watershed drains nearly 20 per cent of Canada's land mass into the Arctic Ocean, with tributaries that reach into B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, the Northwest Territories and the Yukon.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA — Access to British Columbia's legislature was restricted briefly Tuesday due to security concerns resulting from a noisy protest inside the building's public gallery.

    New Democrat Decries Brief Security Shutdown At B.C. Legislature

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires
    Forests Minister Steve Thomson said Tuesday that humans have caused 375 of the 1,086 wildfires that have been reported since April 1 and those flames have burned 440 square kilometres. 

    B.C. To Review Penalty And Fine Structure For People Who Spark Wildfires

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge
    VICTORIA — A second-degree-murder charge has been dropped against a police officer involved in a lengthy armed standoff outside a Vancouver-area casino.

    Crown Says Delta Police Officer Won't Stand Trial On Second-Degree Murder Charge

    Record Warm Temperatures To Have Years-long Effect On B.C. Salmon Stocks

    VANCOUVER — Record-breaking temperatures along the coast of British Columbia will harm Pacific salmon for years to come, says the Fisheries Department.

    Record Warm Temperatures To Have Years-long Effect On B.C. Salmon Stocks

    Law Prohibiting Sale Of Cryonics' Services In B.C. Challenged In Court

    Law Prohibiting Sale Of Cryonics' Services In B.C. Challenged In Court
    VANCOUVER — A law prohibiting the sale of a service in British Columbia that preserves human bodies at ultra-low temperatures after clinical death is being challenged in the province's courts. 

    Law Prohibiting Sale Of Cryonics' Services In B.C. Challenged In Court

    B.C. Minister Amrik Virk's Brother-In-Law, Amardeep Singh Ahluwalia, Found Murdered In Kelowna

    B.C. Minister Amrik Virk's Brother-In-Law, Amardeep Singh Ahluwalia, Found Murdered In Kelowna
    Amardeep Singh Ahluwalia, 47 was reportedly murdered in a violent attack inside his home in the Black Mountain city of Kelowna, in what the police said was a "targeted homicide"

    B.C. Minister Amrik Virk's Brother-In-Law, Amardeep Singh Ahluwalia, Found Murdered In Kelowna