A public opinion poll by the Real Estate Foundation of BC and the University of Victoria’s POLIS Water Sustainability Project shows that water is now the top environmental issue in the province.
Six in ten (62%) BC residents say they are concerned about pollution of lakes, rivers, and streams — ahead of all other environmental issues, including climate change (59%), declining salmon stocks (59%), and deforestation (55%).
Public perception of freshwater health in the province appears to have taken a major hit in recent years. Just 35% of British Columbians now rate the overall health of lakes, rivers, and streams around their communities as good or excellent — down from 44% in 2013.
The survey also finds increasing concern about community water sources. Two in three British Columbians (66%, up from 57% in 2018) now say they are concerned about the potential for a major water crisis in their community in the next few years. Concerns are highest on Vancouver Island, in the Lower Mainland, and in the Southern Interior, particularly among older adults (aged 65+).
Water concerns may have been heightened by the events of the past summer. Three in four (75%) British Columbians surveyed say that they view summer 2021 as one of the hottest, driest, and worst fire seasons in living memory.
The survey results suggest that British Columbians are concerned and increasingly paying attention to water issues. More than three-quarters (78%) say that BC needs to make major investments in watershed security to protect fresh water.
“These trends reflect the growing consensus among both experts and the public that our water cannot be taken for granted. Watershed security — the need to responsibly and sustainably manage water and its sources — is the common theme that links the top issues of our time,” said Oliver M. Brandes, co-director of the POLIS Project at the University of Victoria. “Without watershed security, climate impacts are worse, droughts endure, wildfires intensify, salmon die, forests fail, soil is lost, food cannot grow, local economies falter, and conflict mounts.
“If this government is serious about solving problems, about securing this province for the future, it needs to be making these connections. With increasing climate instability in the face of increasing local development and an expanding population, taking action now is a no-brainer,” Brandes added. “Watershed security is more than just an environmental problem; watershed security is a reconciliation, health, and economic imperative.”
Survey results also suggest that the public wants industry to shoulder more of the cost of protecting fresh water. More than three-quarters (77%) say that BC should make industry pay more to secure and restore BC watersheds.
Three in four (75%) British Columbians would like to see all water rental fees collected from industry dedicated to an independent Watershed Security Fund. Eight in ten (82%) say they want to see corporate polluters jailed and fined.
“Fresh water is a top priority across BC because healthy watersheds are essential to healthy communities,” said Mark Gifford, CEO of the Real Estate Foundation of BC. “Taking action to protect and restore watersheds is a big opportunity to secure fresh water, adapt to climate change, revitalize salmon stocks, and create jobs.”
McAllister Opinion Research conducted the online survey of 1,012 English-speaking BC residents (aged 18 years or older) from September 17 to 20.
Lee L says
‘Make industry pay more’…surveyed largely from people who have never been near an industry.
Deforestation — not happening in BC. I used to ask people on the North Shore to point out, from the lush forest covered mountains around Vancouver, which of the mountain cover ( watershed , Seymour, Grouse, Holyburn/Cypress, Fromme, etc.) is second growth. Most had no idea how to answer.
Real answer? …. ALL OF IT. How much of it grew back in the rain. ALL OF IT.
As far as water goes, it is pouring rain on the North Shore as I write and shortage isn’t a problem except in the inaccurate twisted headlines of our media ‘partners’ . The salmon declines are blamed on climate change, habitat loss, sea lice, and anything else the envirobusiness can get a news outlet to publish. ( A very low bar).
What is never included in the list of reasons for the decline are the Russian and Chinese factory ships out in the north Pacific busily raping the ocean life. PS. There is almost NO fish processing left on the Canadian West coast. Is that because there are no fish ? It is because the fish are processed IN CHINA. Read the box on the next frozen fish product you find in any store if you do not believe this. Or… ask you fresh fish monger where they source their shrimp and many other fish products. I dare ya.