GLOBE-Net, October 1, 2011 - Thirty
organizations, delivering projects in five countries, will share
more than $4 million for programs that help protect watersheds and
improve access to clean drinking water via RBC Blue Water Project's
leadership grants.
"Since we launched the RBC Blue Water Project in 2007, we have
now provided funding to over 450 organizations around the world
that care about protecting and preserving water," said Gordon M.
Nixon, president and CEO, RBC.
"I congratulate this newest group of grant recipients. Their
work is critical to the protection of the world's valuable water
resources, and we are proud to support them in their efforts."
RBC's 2011 funding will support a range of projects from wetland
and shoreline restoration to water quality monitoring and sharing
of sustainable water management practices in agricultural regions.
More than 180 organizations applied for 2011 leadership grants.
"This is our fourth year of evaluating grant proposals, and our
panel has never been more impressed with the quality of
applications. We really are seeing the best of the world's best
organizations working to protect water," said Rob de Loë, professor
and University Research Chair in Water Policy and Governance,
University of Waterloo, and chair of the Blue Water Project
advisory panel.
"This year, we were happy to see an increased number of
collaborative projects between various organizations, more
on-the-ground projects that will restore shorelines of rivers,
streams and lakes and more initiatives to engage the agricultural
community. I'm confident that our recipients will make a
demonstrable difference in the health of their local
watersheds."
NATIONAL
- Free the Children: A grant of $420,000 will
fund the delivery of H2O 4U, a water-focused speaking tour that is
offered to middle and high schools across Canada. Speakers will
inspire and educate youth about the importance of clean water at
home and around the world. An RBC Blue Water Project grant of
$300,000 in 2009 helped Free the Children take this tour to over
100 schools.
- Tides Canada Initiatives Society/Waterlution:
A grant of $200,000 will help Waterlution build on
its "Future of Water" workshops, where 18-35 year olds explore
critical and complex water management issues. A new "Hub Project"
in five regions across Canada will allow workshop participants to
put their learnings into action. An RBC Blue Water Project grant of
$120,000 in 2008 helped Waterlution provide 40 workshops in 28
communities.
ATLANTIC CANADA
- Clean Annapolis River Project: A grant of
$36,000 will fund field assessments and restoration plans for
watercourse barriers on the Annapolis River and its tributaries.
Culverts and dams are preventing the free migration of threatened
fish species to critical habitats.
- Atlantic Coastal Action Program Cape Breton: A
grant of $35,000 will help this organization monitor streams that
are affected by development and land use as well as restoring the
Salmon River and its tributaries.
QUEBEC
- Comité Zone d'Interventions Prioritaires (ZIP)
Alma-Jonquière:A grant of $240,000 will fund a community
stewardship project, operating in 40 major watersheds in Quebec and
expanding into New Brunswick. Volunteers are trained to monitor
hundreds of rivers, collecting data for the identification and
assessment of developing problems. Students from elementary school
and up will be engaged through the Ministry of Education for New
Brunswick.
- Fondation de la Faune du Quebec: A grant of
$200,000 will help this organizationdevelop and share water and
habitat conservation best practices and raise awareness about
sustainable agricultural practices with more than 500 agricultural
producers in southern Quebec.
ONTARIO
- Upper Thames River Conservation Authority: A
grant of $120,000 will kick-start a Clean Water Project for
individual rural farming and non-farming landowners, providing
technical assistance and financial incentives for projects that
will improve and protect ground and surface water quality, such as
decommissioning unused wells, soil erosion control, clean water
diversions around barnyards, woodland and wetland enhancement, tree
planting, fuel storage and septic system upgrades.
- Lake Ontario Waterkeeper (LOW): A $200,000
grant helped LOW launch Swim Guide inJune, 2011. Swim
Guide is a free smartphone app that helps people locate the
closest, cleanest beach for swimming, get directions, view photos,
and share their experience through social networks. LOW used an RBC
Blue Water Project grant of $200,000 in 2008 to create the
Guide.
- Georgian Bay Forever: A grant of $100,000 will
support the production of the 'Eastern Georgian Bay Health Report'
for release in the summer of 2012. The report will outline the
current conditions of the region from the Severn River to Killarney
including ecological conditions, general threats, "hot spots" of
special concern, and emerging issues. In addition, the report will
identify knowledge gaps, research opportunities and detail local
stewardship activities.
- Royal Ontario Museum: A $100,000 grant
supported the delivery of the museum's Water: The Exhibit display,
providing an informative, dramatic, and educational experience
about the importance of water to more than 125,000 visitors in six
months.
- Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Foundation: A
grant of $100,000 will help the George Richardson Park Project
reduce levels of phosphorus entering Lake Simcoe with activities
such as community tree planting and irrigation activities.
- One Change Foundation: A grant of $100,000
will help this organization mobilize Ottawa residents to take
action on residential water waste. In collaboration with the City
of Ottawa, volunteers and One Change staff will go door to door to
distribute simple kits that show people how to detect and repair
common toilet leaks.
- Hamilton Conservation Foundation: A grant of
$90,000 will help the Foundation protect, enhance and restore
environmentally significant natural areas and watercourses by
educating and working one-on-one with landowners.
- Ottawa Riverkeeper: A grant of $75,000 will
fund a 28-day, 90 kilometre exploration of crucial water issues in
the Ottawa River watershed, in partnership with Canadian Geographic
and the Canadian Canoe Foundation. The expedition will be broadcast
online and the information collected will be used as part of the
Lake Ontario Waterkeeper "Swim Drink Fish" application, also funded
by an RBC Blue Water Project grant.
- Lower Trent Region Conservation Authority: A
grant of $50,000 will support The Healthy Shorelines Clean Water
Stewardship Program, which will raise awareness about the
ecological health of the watershed through educational outreach to
residents and landowners, including shoreline consultations,
community workshops, demonstration projects and financial
assistance to landowners to implement qualified projects.
MANITOBA
- Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation: A grant
of $225,000 will fund "Green Banks: Clear Waters", a program to
improve water quality in riparian areas in four south-central
Manitoba conservation districts. A new riparian health assessment
tool will help community-based watershed groups classify, analyze,
and provide riparian health information to their stakeholders. This
collaborative project also involves Agriculture Agri-Food Canada,
Agri-Environment Service Branch and Manitoba Water
Stewardship.
- Lake Winnipeg Foundation: A grant of $40,000
will support the Sensitive Habitat Inventory and Mapping (SHIM)
project that will provide baseline scientific information for
shoreline management.
ALBERTA
- Trout Unlimited Canada:A grant of $150,000
will enable this organization to increase riparian health, and
improve water quality in the Drywood Creek Watershed system in
southwest Alberta. Working in collaboration with Drywood-Yarrow
Conservation Partnership and Southwest Alberta Conservation
Partnership, agricultural producers will be engaged to protect
sensitive riparian areas from cattle grazing by installing
protective fencing and off-stream livestock watering systems.
- Bow River Basin Council: A grant of $40,000
will help the Council modify an existing computer program so it can
simulate the effects of natural ecological processes and land uses
on water quality, natural capital values, agricultural lands,
municipal revenues, municipal operating costs, and natural areas.
Municipalities and watershed management groups will use the
information to identify optimum zoning strategies, planning and
best practices.
BRITISH COLUMBIA
- A.S.T.C. Science World Society: A grant of
$300,000 will help Science World add a "Water Story" to its new
35,000 square foot interactive outdoor science park. The Water
Story's exhibits will include a wetland habitat, a cistern to
illustrate rainwater capture for gardening and agriculture, an
interactive outdoor stream table to demonstrate the benefits and
risks of man-made reservoirs and dams, and a water infrastructure
display to demonstrate where our water comes from and where it
goes.
- Trout Unlimited Canada:A grant of $125,000
will help this organization complete a project that will restore
and improve access to degraded fish habitats in six streams flowing
into Qualicum Bay. RBC provided a grant of $75,000 in 2009 to cover
the first phase of the program. This project is a collaboration
between Trout Unlimited, Nile Creek Enhancement Society and
Vancouver Island University.
- Fraser Valley Conservancy: A grant of $120,000
will fund a collaborative project between the Conservancy, the
Chilliwack River Action Committee and the City of Abbotsford to
enhance and protect over fifty acres of land, restore over ten
acres, and increase the biological function and improve wildlife
habitats at four sites within the Fraser River Watershed.
- Pacific Salmon Foundation: A grant of $70,000
will help the Foundation launch 'Salmon-Safe B.C.', a farm
certification program to protect Salmon by transforming land
management practices To earn Salmon-Safe certification, farms are
required to improve irrigation efficiency, reduce run-off and wind
erosion, protect wildlife habitat, cultivate ecological
compensation areas to enhance native biodiversity, as well as
reduce or eliminate the use of harmful pesticides.
Organizations in the United States, Bahamas, and Brazil also
received grants.
At
GLOBE 2012,taking place March 14-16, 2012,
Industry experts from various sectors will discuss how they
successfully manage their operations through the sustainable use
and reuse of water.
Experts from government and the private sector will also address
the challenges and opportunities the surround the issue of access
to water, which the United Nations believes is a basic human right.
(The Right to Water). More information on
GLOBE 2012 is available here.