Video - Functional environmental flows: A practical strategy for healthy rivers

Authors
David Hill
Resource Date:
March
2013

David Hill describes how focusing on functional flows versus typical water conservation management could improve aquatic in-stream ecosystems while meeting current water allocations. Natural flow has not taken place in the Bow River for 100 years. So accounting for functional flows may be a way to enable aquatic systems to do their natural processes when our typical water conservation objectives would result in a different type of management. Water conservation would require us to store water in high flood years and then release the excess flood water later in the year. Using a functional flow strategy, the flood water would be released at flood to allow natural ecosystems to do what they normally would during flood seasons (e.g. cottonwood recruitment).

Hill describes how a functional flow management system would work to enhance aquatic ecosystems while still delivering the water required by prairie water users (irrigation, hydro, industry and municipal).

David Hill is Director of Centres and Institutes and Research Advocacy, University of Lethbridge, Alberta. 

From March 12-14th, 2013, people involved in water issues in Alberta met in Red Deer to discuss ideas and plans for managing water resources. The conference, jointly hosted by the Canadian Water Resources Association (CWRA) Alberta Chapter and Alberta Watershed Planning & Advisory Councils (WPACs), emphasized the integrated planning that is necessary for water management in the future.

The Alberta Land-use Knowledge Network was able to record many of the keynote speakers and conference presentations