Water News

Alberta Water News is a free, subscription-based service that provides the latest information on water news across Alberta and upcoming events.

The news is distributed weekly on Mondays via a collated email and Monday to Friday via WaterPortal social media (X was Twitter). Please note that news will not be distributed on Holiday Mondays and will be released the following Tuesday.  

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Town of Neepawa, MB recognized for 100+ year-old cast iron drinking water pipes

PUBLISHED: 01 November 2023      Last Edited: 01 November 2023

Water Canada

The Ductile Iron Pipe Research Association (DIPRA) welcomes the town of Neepawa in Manitoba, Canada, to the Century Club, which celebrates the strength and durability of cast iron water mains. Neepawa installed the cast iron mains along its Mountain Avenue in 1912. The town is currently in the process of replacing 4-inch mains with larger pipes to aid in fire flow operations, said Operations Manager Denis Saquet. There are also original 6- and 8-inch mains still in operation today. Click here to continue reading

Canada and British Columbia invest in the final phase of wastewater infrastructure upgrades

PUBLISHED: 01 November 2023      Last Edited: 01 November 2023

Water Canada

The final phase of wastewater infrastructure upgrades is set to get underway thanks to an investment of more than $10.1 million from the governments of Canada and British Columbia, as well as Lake Cowichan. Announced by Minister Sean Fraser, Minister Anne Kang, and Mayor Tim McGonigle, this project will enhance the wastewater system, safeguarding the Cowichan River. Click here to continue reading

Low river levels result in concentrated trout spawning locations in Calgary

PUBLISHED: 31 October 2023      Last Edited: 31 October 2023

Global News

Fall brings brown trout spawning time along Calgary’s Bow and Elbow rivers, and a group of citizen scientists hope to capture a better picture of how that fish population is faring. Volunteers with Calgary River Valleys (CRV) were on the Bow River from Baker Park to Parkdale counting spawning nests called redds. Click here to continue reading

Calgary lifts outdoor water restrictions as cold weather expected to reduce use

PUBLISHED: 31 October 2023      Last Edited: 31 October 2023

CBC News

The City of Calgary says it is lifting its outdoor water restrictions, but it’s still asking residents to use water wisely. Officials say the restrictions, which have been in effect for two months, will be removed Tuesday. They were implemented in mid-August due to record low flows in the Bow and Elbow rivers that supply the city and other downstream communities across the Prairies. Click here to continue reading

Compare and Contrast: Rescuers free humpback whale ‘hog-tied’ to 300lb crab pot in Alaska

PUBLISHED: 31 October 2023      Last Edited: 31 October 2023

The Guardian

A young humpback whale was freed by rescuers in Alaska after it was discovered hog-tied to a 300lb crab pot. The rescue, which occurred on 11 October, came after two local residents discovered the trapped whale a day earlier in the coastal waters near Gustavus, a city close to Glacier Bay national park in the southernmost part of Alaska. Researchers estimate the whale to be about three to four years old. Click here to continue reading

‘Snowmazing’ conditions lead to early openings for some southern Alberta ski hills

PUBLISHED: 31 October 2023      Last Edited: 31 October 2023

Calgary Herald

With healthy levels of snowfall to close out October, several southern Alberta ski hills are planning opening days early next month. Mt. Norquay will be the first out of the gate, with opening day scheduled for Friday, followed by Nakiska, which is set to open some of its higher-terrain, intermediate to advanced level slopes on Saturday. Lake Louise Ski Area is set to open the following weekend. Click here to continue reading

Lakes in Kootenay and Yoho National Parks closed after suspected whirling disease

PUBLISHED: 30 October 2023      Last Edited: 30 October 2023

CBC News

All bodies of water in Kootenay and Yoho National Parks have been closed for the next five months after a suspected case of whirling disease was reported in British Columbia’s southeast Rocky Mountains. Parks Canada says in a news release it’s the first time the microscopic parasite that causes the fatal disease in fish has been detected in the province. Click here to continue reading

Drought reveals cracks in Canada-U.S. Columbia River Treaty as B.C. lake dries up

PUBLISHED: 30 October 2023      Last Edited: 30 October 2023

CBC News

The resident of Nakusp on the shores of the reservoir in British Columbia’s southern Interior says she’s seen thousands of dead fish on the shore, and the receding waterline means boat access has been cut to waterfront properties. Instead of lapping waters, some homes now face an expanse of sucking quicksand. Drought is part of the reason. But so too is the Columbia River Treaty with the United States that obligates B.C. to direct water from the reservoir across the border at American behest. Click here to continue reading

The race of water droplets

PUBLISHED: 30 October 2023      Last Edited: 30 October 2023

Science Daily

How fast does a droplet flow along a fiber? It depends on the diameter of the fiber… and also on its substructure! These are the findings of a study conducted by researchers who are interested in microfluidics, especially water harvesting in arid/semi-arid regions of our planet. Click here to continue reading

Tracking down environmental toxins

PUBLISHED: 30 October 2023      Last Edited: 30 October 2023

Science Daily

PFAS, a family of highly fluorinated substances, represent a danger for humans and the environment. Particularly problematic members of this family, such as perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) appear to cause organ damage and cancer, as well as disrupting the endocrine system. Click here to continue reading

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