Canada should work
with U.S.Open
reply, to the open letter from Honourable Alex Atamanenko, Member of
Parliament, of February 4, 2009, to Honourable Jim Prentice, Canada’s
Minister of the Environment. In which Mr. Atamanenko urged Canada,
First Nations, and British Columbia to unequivocally oppose Washington
State, to build a hydroelectric dam on the Similkameen River at Shenker
Bend, near Oroville WA, and Osoyoos British Columbia, BC. Similkameen
River starts at Manning Park British Columbia and crosses in to the US
at Nighthawk, WA and is a tributary to Okanogan River (Okanagan on the
Canadian side) and the Columbia River.
Depending on the
scale and water storage, the size of the dam could more or less affect
Canada and British Columbia and that should be a concern in Canada.
Likewise, the concern in the US and WA, should Canada ever decide to
build a hydroelectric dam and water reservoir on the Canadian side,
which potentially could divert water from the Similkameen to the
Okanagan.
However, the
important thing is that no decision has been made on either side of the
border. The only decision made in WA as to the Similkameen River is to
invest $300.000 in research and an exploratory feasibility study, and
Canada is invited to participate. Olympia’s decision to earmark $200
million to study water storage is not a decision to build a dam on the
Similkameen River that would flood 7200 hectares in Canada, as Mr.
Atamanenko writes about in Canada. The outcome of the study may be to
“just” restore and relicense the Enloe Dam decommissioned in the early
fifties, with little or no impact to Canada.
With
all respect to Mr. Atamanenko, instead of urging Canada and Canadians to
oppose ideas at the exploratory stage, may I suggest that it would be
better to urge Canada to participate and work with the US and WA in the
research, involving universities
in Washington and British Columbia.
The research is
suitable for
the faculty
at UBCO Barber School of Arts & Sciences at the University of British
Columbia Okanagan Kelowna. As well for The Canadian Swedish IISRE
Initiative, the Institute for Sustainable Regional Economies, in
cooperation with IRIS, the Initiative for Rural Innovation and
Stewardship at North Central Washington Resource Conservation &
Development Council. Water is
already a strategic commodity, and will increase in importance
globally. The International Joint Commission
obviously has an obligation here to find joint understanding and
solutions.
Mr.
Atamanenko’s letter should remind politicians that politics cannot be
understood without the use of social and natural science. Hence,
democracy and a sustainable economy and the standard of living in a
democratic governed economy as Canada and United States, entirely depend
on understanding produced by research. Understanding that emerges in
society by a free flow of information, openly reported and vigorously
discussed. Mr. Atamanenko’s letter should spur reflection and vigorous
discussion to the left or the right on both sides of the border and that
is good, because Canada and United States are caught in an inescapable
network of social, economic and ecological mutuality. What affects one
country directly, will unequivocally affect all indirectly, such as a
dam, whether it is to the north or south or of the border.
Osoyoos February 11, 2009
OISD