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Canada to Draft National Fresh Water Strategy

Full Title: An Act respecting the development of a national strategy in relation to fresh water

Summary#

This bill orders the Minister of the Environment to create a national strategy for fresh water. It sets out who must be consulted, what topics the strategy must cover, and when the public report is due. It also requires Parliament to review the strategy after five years (Review (1)).

  • The Minister must develop a strategy on drinking water, infrastructure, lake health, biodiversity, groundwater, and international issues (National strategy (a)-(f)).
  • At least one national conference must be held during development (Conference).
  • The Minister must table the strategy in Parliament within 2 years of royal assent and post it online within 10 days after tabling (Report to Parliament (1); Publication of report (2)).
  • A parliamentary committee must review the strategy within 5 years of tabling and report back within 1 year (Review (1)-(2)).
  • The bill itself does not change any standards or create new regulations; it creates a planning and reporting process (National strategy; Report to Parliament (1)).

What it means for you#

  • Households
    • No immediate change to water service or bills. The Act does not set or change drinking water rules; it orders a strategy (National strategy).
    • You will be able to read the national strategy after it is tabled in Parliament and posted online within 10 days (Publication of report (2)).
  • Indigenous communities
    • The Minister must consult Indigenous groups while developing the strategy, including through at least one conference (National strategy; Conference).
    • Your input can shape areas like drinking water standards, ecosystem protection, and groundwater knowledge gaps (National strategy (a), (e), (f)).
  • Provincial and municipal governments
    • You will be consulted on the strategy and invited to at least one conference (National strategy; Conference).
    • You may be asked to share information on water and wastewater infrastructure and climate risks (National strategy (c)).
    • No immediate new mandates on infrastructure or standards are created by this Act (National strategy).
  • Scientists, researchers, and civil society groups
    • You are named consultees and may attend at least one conference to inform the strategy (National strategy; Conference).
    • Expertise is sought on eutrophication, biodiversity, and groundwater data gaps (National strategy (d)-(f)).
  • General public and Parliament
    • The strategy must be tabled in both Houses within 2 years of royal assent (Report to Parliament (1)).
    • A parliamentary committee must review the strategy within 5 years and publish recommendations within 1 year of starting the review (Review (1)-(2)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • No explicit spending, revenue, or fees are included in the bill text (entire Act).
  • Required activities include consultations, at least one conference, preparing and tabling a report, posting it online, and a later parliamentary review; the Government has not published cost estimates (National strategy; Conference; Report to Parliament (1); Publication of report (2); Review (1)-(2)).
  • No fiscal note identified. Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Creates a single national plan to guide how Canada conserves and uses fresh water across jurisdictions, reducing gaps and duplication (National strategy).
  • Focuses the plan on key problems: safe drinking water, climate-ready infrastructure, eutrophication, biodiversity loss, groundwater data, and international commitments (National strategy (a)-(f)).
  • Sets firm timelines and public transparency: table within 2 years and post online within 10 days (Report to Parliament (1); Publication of report (2)).
  • Requires inclusive input from provinces, municipalities, Indigenous groups, scientists, and civil society, which can improve the plan’s quality (National strategy; Conference).
  • Builds accountability through a mandatory parliamentary review within 5 years and a public committee report with recommended changes (Review (1)-(2)).
  • Keeps options open: the Act does not pre-judge solutions, allowing evidence to guide next steps (National strategy (a)-(f)). Assumes broad consultation will yield actionable, consensus-based recommendations.

Opponents' View#

  • Produces a strategy but does not require any actions to be implemented, which could limit real-world impact (National strategy; Report to Parliament (1)). Assumes future governments may not act on recommendations.
  • Sets timelines for planning but none for executing improvements, which could delay responses to urgent water issues (Report to Parliament (1); Review (1)). Assumes delays would materially affect outcomes.
  • May overlap with existing provincial and municipal water plans, creating coordination burdens without added funding (National strategy). Assumes current subnational plans already address these topics well.
  • “At least one conference” may be too little for a national process, risking narrow input (Conference). Assumes no additional engagement beyond the minimum.
  • Does not name businesses or utilities among required consultees, which could miss operational insights for implementation (National strategy). Assumes municipal representation may not fully capture utility or industry perspectives.
  • No cost estimates or budget are provided, so administrative work could strain existing departmental resources (entire Act). Assumes the department lacks capacity without new appropriations.

Timeline

Dec 16, 2021 • House

First reading

Climate and Environment
Infrastructure
Healthcare
Indigenous Affairs
Foreign Affairs